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2006年VOA标准英语-Following Zarqawi Death, Hunt for Terrorist Lea

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By Benjamin Sand
Islamabad
09 June 2006

Pakistan has described the killing1 of Abu Musab al- the terrorist leader in Iraq, as a significant development in the global war on terror. But al-Qaida chief Osama bin2 Laden3 continues to elude4 U.S., Afghan and Pakistani forces.

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Zarqawi's death is being widely hailed both in Pakistan and Afghanistan as a major victory in the U.S.-led war against terror.

But a written statement released Thursday purportedly5 from the leader of the Taleban insurgents6 in Afghanistan, Mullah Mohammad Omar, said Zarqawi's death would not weaken the fight against what the statement referred to as "crusader forces". The Taleban is closely allied7 with al-Qaida.
 

Osama bin Laden (file photo)   
  
American, Afghan and Pakistani forces have been hunting al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden and his associates, including Mullah Omar, throughout the region for nearly five years.

Military analyst8 and retired9 Pakistani General Talat Masood says, if anything, the news from Iraq will make it harder to find the militant10 leaders.

"It will not affect operational aspects of al-Qaida in this part of the world, but they will become more suspicious and more careful," he said.

Masood adds that bin Laden and his associates are already taking extraordinary measures to avoid detection.

The Saudi-born militant reportedly avoids using satellite phones and computers, communicating almost exclusively through hand delivered notes.

The hunt for bin Laden has focused primarily on the remote tribal11 regions on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

 
An Afghan protester prepares to throw stones at a U.S. military convoy12 in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, May 29, 2006
  
The United States has some 23,000 troops in Afghanistan, most involved in the hunt for al-Qaida and for Taleban insurgents.

On this side of the border, Pakistan has more than 80,000 soldiers in the tribal regions to capture anyone fleeing the U.S.-led operations.

Pakistani military officials say they have captured more than 700 al-Qaida suspects, including several close aides to bin Laden.

But bin Laden himself remains13 out of reach. And, unlike Zarqawi, who reportedly sought publicity, the world's most-wanted terrorist is keeping a very low profile


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