20 October: DEBKAfile has learned from military sources in Dushanbe and Bishbek, capitals of Tajikistan and the Kyrgizstan respectively, that at least 15 Chinese fighting men on the side of the Taliban, were killed in last week’s US bombing over Kahandar and in a separate incident on the ground. This report as confirmed by Pakistani sources in Peshawar, who discovered the Chinese presence alongside the Taliban from their own intelligence reports on the death of the commander of Arab Afghan troops in Jalalabad, Basir al Masri, who was a senior aide to Osama Bin Laden and the Egyptian Islamic Jihad chief, Ayman al Zuweiri.
Al Masri appears to have been caught by an American bombardment, just
as he was leaving Kahandar for Jalalabad after meeting Taliban leaders.
They warned him as he left that US Special Force units were operating in
the southern and western outskirts of the town. Because they thought the
size of his bodyguard insufficient, they offered to a detail of their own
men to see him safely past the danger zone. Among that armed escort were
five Chinese fighters. A Special Forces unit waylaid the group and
detonated explosive charges, one of which hit Abu Basir’s vehicle and a
second the escort vehicles. Most of the escort was killed, including three
of the Chinese guards. The next day, their bodies were carried into Kandahar.
Another 10 Chinese fighters died in US bombardments.
DEBKAfile’s sources have no doubt that the Chinese combatants fought in a Taliban unit – and were not part of Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda or its associated Egyptian Jihad forces in Afghanistan. Neither organization admits non-Arab adherents – certainly not as guards for its senior officers.
According to DEBKAfile’s intelligence sources the mutually beneficial Chinese-bin Laden relationship goes back some years. The British daily, Guardian, carries a report Saturday by John Hooper in Milan, claiming that three years ago, China paid bin Laden several million dollars for unexploded American cruise missiles left over from the US attack on his bases. Hooper quotes an alleged senior Al Qaida agent in Europe, whose account is contained in the transcript of a secretly taped conversation between two bin Laden adherents.
The Americans fired 75 missiles in the raid on bin Laden’s bases in
Afghanistan, carried out on August 20, 1988, in reprisal for the terrorist
strikes against US embassies in East Africa. Forty were found unexploded.
The conversation taped took place in Milan between a Libyan called
Ben Heni - who was arrested in Munich last week and accused by the
Italian prosecution of being the liaison officer between two Al Qaida cells
in Frankfurt and Milan – and a leader of the Italian cells, Sami Ben Khemmais
Essid. The Italian police had bugged the flat.
According to the Guardian report, the two men confirmed bin Laden’s
close ties with China and described how the huge sums the Chinese paid
for the unexploded US missiles helped him finance his next three years
of Al Qaida operations.