hist2004
07-24-2004, 05:02 PM
55 Brigade: Taliban's elite forces
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2001
LONDON: The elite fighting corps of Muslim fundamentalists, the '55 Brigade', is believed to be one of the key targets of the US ground troops as they launched their first attacks inside Afghanistan this weekend, a media report said here on Sunday.
The 55 Brigade is Taliban's shock troops, a multinational force of up to 5,000 men, financed and trained by Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda organisation.
"It has up to 5,000 fighters, of whom about 3,000 are serving in Afghanistan at any one time. The remainder are in Kashmir and Chechnya," the The Sunday Times report said.
Although a part of the Taliban's military apparatus, the brigade is unique in being made up almost entirely of non-Afghans.
According to the report, the 55 Brigade members are better trained and equipped than regular Taliban troops and have experience in guerrilla warfare and terrorism.
The report quoted former members as saying that they are the most dedicated soldiers, often spearheading Taliban offensives and forcing reluctant fighters into battle.
Bin Laden is reported to have used his wealth and civil engineering background to build high-quality roads, houses, barracks and training camps for the brigade, the report said.
Over 500 construction labourers were reported to be working earlier this year on a massive underground defence system near Kandahar, which is likely to have been one of the main targets for American bombing raids.
The report said 55 Brigade had its own designated airstrip, also close to Kandahar, as well as technical support and weapon repair workshops.
According to the report, the 55 Brigade comprises two overlapping generations of Afghan veterans.
One generation fought in the anti-Soviet jehad between 1979 and 1989. This group was funded by the CIA and Saudi intelligence and trained almost solely by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.
After the Soviet military withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, the unwanted soldiers formed a free-floating pool of Afghan Arab Mujahideen in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the report said.
The "second generation" of the 55 Brigade fighters comprises those trained in Afghanistan who went home to Kashmir, Chechnya and Bosnia to fight their own "jehads", it said.
"As these struggles died down or grew harder, they returned to Afghanistan. They are similar in age and ideology to the earlier generation, but better educated and trained," it said.
The report said al-Qaeda fighters dress like Afghans, but mostly speak Arabic. The largest contingent is drawn from the Arabian peninsula as well as Egypt, Algeria and Libya.
Others have joined the Brigade from similarly troubled parts of the world: from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, from Southeast Asia and Indonesia. There are Muslims from Western China (Uyghurs), Russia (Chechens) and the Balkans (Bosnians).
According to the report, all are united by their religious fervour and a ruthless pursuit of jehad.
The report said the fighting expertise of the 55 Brigade has been bolstered by drawing on the techniques of the best soldiers from around the world.
It quoted recent defectors as saying that 55 Brigade's training methods include the use of special services' manuals from the US and Pakistan, which are reinforced with religious instructions.
Weapons and equipment for the Brigade have come from Pakistan, Sudan and the Taliban, as well as from al-Qaeda procurement officers in the West, the report said.
Initially, al-Qaeda fighters in Pakistan and Afghanistan used the same infrastructure employed to train the anti-Soviet Mujaheddin.
For a while, after Bin Laden moved to Khartoum in Sudan, 30 terrorist training camps were set up in farms that he owned there. But when he returned to Afghanistan in 1996, so did the fighters and the camps.
Regards,
Hist2004
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2001
LONDON: The elite fighting corps of Muslim fundamentalists, the '55 Brigade', is believed to be one of the key targets of the US ground troops as they launched their first attacks inside Afghanistan this weekend, a media report said here on Sunday.
The 55 Brigade is Taliban's shock troops, a multinational force of up to 5,000 men, financed and trained by Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda organisation.
"It has up to 5,000 fighters, of whom about 3,000 are serving in Afghanistan at any one time. The remainder are in Kashmir and Chechnya," the The Sunday Times report said.
Although a part of the Taliban's military apparatus, the brigade is unique in being made up almost entirely of non-Afghans.
According to the report, the 55 Brigade members are better trained and equipped than regular Taliban troops and have experience in guerrilla warfare and terrorism.
The report quoted former members as saying that they are the most dedicated soldiers, often spearheading Taliban offensives and forcing reluctant fighters into battle.
Bin Laden is reported to have used his wealth and civil engineering background to build high-quality roads, houses, barracks and training camps for the brigade, the report said.
Over 500 construction labourers were reported to be working earlier this year on a massive underground defence system near Kandahar, which is likely to have been one of the main targets for American bombing raids.
The report said 55 Brigade had its own designated airstrip, also close to Kandahar, as well as technical support and weapon repair workshops.
According to the report, the 55 Brigade comprises two overlapping generations of Afghan veterans.
One generation fought in the anti-Soviet jehad between 1979 and 1989. This group was funded by the CIA and Saudi intelligence and trained almost solely by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.
After the Soviet military withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, the unwanted soldiers formed a free-floating pool of Afghan Arab Mujahideen in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the report said.
The "second generation" of the 55 Brigade fighters comprises those trained in Afghanistan who went home to Kashmir, Chechnya and Bosnia to fight their own "jehads", it said.
"As these struggles died down or grew harder, they returned to Afghanistan. They are similar in age and ideology to the earlier generation, but better educated and trained," it said.
The report said al-Qaeda fighters dress like Afghans, but mostly speak Arabic. The largest contingent is drawn from the Arabian peninsula as well as Egypt, Algeria and Libya.
Others have joined the Brigade from similarly troubled parts of the world: from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, from Southeast Asia and Indonesia. There are Muslims from Western China (Uyghurs), Russia (Chechens) and the Balkans (Bosnians).
According to the report, all are united by their religious fervour and a ruthless pursuit of jehad.
The report said the fighting expertise of the 55 Brigade has been bolstered by drawing on the techniques of the best soldiers from around the world.
It quoted recent defectors as saying that 55 Brigade's training methods include the use of special services' manuals from the US and Pakistan, which are reinforced with religious instructions.
Weapons and equipment for the Brigade have come from Pakistan, Sudan and the Taliban, as well as from al-Qaeda procurement officers in the West, the report said.
Initially, al-Qaeda fighters in Pakistan and Afghanistan used the same infrastructure employed to train the anti-Soviet Mujaheddin.
For a while, after Bin Laden moved to Khartoum in Sudan, 30 terrorist training camps were set up in farms that he owned there. But when he returned to Afghanistan in 1996, so did the fighters and the camps.
Regards,
Hist2004