ARAB-US RELATIONS - Oct 1 - US Offers Rewards In New Campaign Against Taliban In Afghanistan.The US military has launched a new "Most Wanted Most Wanted may refer to:
doggo, out of sight ". The list does not include internationally known names who already have large price tags on their heads like Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama. - who has evaded US capture since 2001 despite a $25 million bounty - or Taliban leader Mullah Omar Noun 1. Mullah Omar - reclusive Afghanistani politician and leader of the Taliban who imposed a strict interpretation of shariah law on Afghanistan (born in 1960) Mullah Mohammed Omar with a US$10m reward. Instead, the list is filled with local insurgent INSURGENT. One who is concerned in an insurrection. He differs from a rebel in this, that rebel is always understood in a bad sense, or one who unjustly opposes the constituted authorities; insurgent may be one who justly opposes the tyranny of constituted authorities. cell leaders responsible for roadside and suicide bomb attacks. "We want the people in that area to know who this guy is and know he's a bad guy, and when they spot him to turn that guy in", said Maj. Chris Belcher, a US spokesman. The program, in the works for weeks, comes despite peace overtures from President Hamid Karzai, who said he would be willing to meet with Omar if it would help bring peace. The posters and billboards will be put up by Afghan soldiers and police in areas where the military suspects the men are operating, Belcher said. Some on the list are also suspected of operating in Pakistan's tribal regions, where the US military does not have the authority to operate. The US says it has killed around 50 mostly midlevel mid·lev·el n. The middle stage or level, as in a series, course of action, or career. insurgent leaders over the past year, a strategy the military is continuing to push with the Most Wanted program. The highest-ranking leader killed this year was Mullah mullah Muslim title applied to a scholar or religious leader, especially in the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. It means “lord” and has also been used in North Africa as an honorific attached to the name of a king, sultan, or member of the nobility. Dadullah Lang, a one-legged militant who orchestrated a rash of Taliban suicide attacks and beheadings. He died of gunshot wounds in a US-led coalition operation in Helmand in May. "You disrupt the network when you take out the leadership. It has an effect", said Belcher. "Those mid and high-level leaders are coordinating the action across Afghanistan. By taking them out there's at least a temporary disruption in the ability of the subordinates to continue coordinated operations". Among the 12 most-wanted men, the US is offering the US$200,000 reward for five, including: Abu Laith al-Libi: An Al Qaeda training camp leader who has appeared in many Internet videos and who the US says was likely behind the February bombing at the US base at Bagram during a visit by US Vice President Dick Cheney. Saraj Haqqani: Son of longtime warlord warlord, in modern Chinese history, autonomous regional military commander. In the political chaos following the death (1916) of republican China's first president and commander in chief, Yüan Shih-kai, central authority fell to the provincial military governors Jalalludin Haqqani and believed to have connections with Al Qaeda. Tahir Yuldash: The leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) was a militant Islamist group formed in 1998 by former Soviet paratrooper Juma Namangani, and the Islamic ideologue Tohir Yuldashev - both ethnic Uzbeks from the Fergana Valley. and an Al Qaeda operational commander. Pollock said the US is offering up to US$10,000 to Afghans who turn in any foreign fighter, such as militants from Arab countries or Chechnya, Turkey, or Uzbekistan. The US has also been paying money to Afghans who tell authorities about roadside bombs that have been planted. "This is not necessarily a new program, we're just putting a lot more energy into it now", Pollock said. |
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