BAGRAM, Afghanistan?Coalition forces searched caves and blasted bunkers Thursday in the Shah e-Kot Valley abandoned by al Qaeda forces after heavy U.S. airstrikes, as forensics experts conducted DNA tests to make certain none of the terrorist organization’s senior leaders was among the dead.
Neither Osama bin Laden nor Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar was believed to be in the Shah-e-Kot valley March 2 when U.S. forces and their Afghan allies launched the biggest offensive of the 5 month-old war. But some corpses were so badly mangled that Maj. Gen. Frank L. Hagenbeck ordered the tests?just to be sure.
“Even if it’s a long shot that maybe one of these al Qaeda leaders [was there], we want to go through every means we’ve got available to us to try to positively identify them,” said Hagenbeck, the commander of all coalition troops in Afghanistan.
A U.S. officer estimated as many as 500 al Qaeda fighters were killed in the 12-day offensive in eastern Afghanistan. But Afghan troops said they found only 25 bodies in the initial sweep of the area. Others may be buried in caves that collapsed during the bombing.
Among the dead were “second and third tier” al Qaeda leaders, Hagenbeck said.
Helicopters patrolled the valley looking for anyone who might have slipped through a coalition dragnet, sneaking out on smuggling routes and into neighboring Pakistan.
Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said Thursday that fighting had “mostly ended” and that troops were in the “exploitation phase,” going cave to cave in search of bodies, weapons and intelligence information.
“We will have a long way to go in Afghanistan,” she said.
Canadian forces took the lead in the mop-up work following the battle, with 500 troops landing high in the snowcapped mountains to search for al Qaeda fugitives, including Saif Rahman Mansour, the Taliban leader of the Shah-e-Kot fighters.
“We’re right on their backs right now,” Hagenbeck said of Rahman and his comrades.
A joint Canadian and American team moved systematically through the area, blasting cave entrances with grenade and machine gun fire to make sure no one was hiding inside.
Canadian officers said they found stacks of rocket propelled grenades, grenade launchers and stacks of small arms ammunition hidden in the abandoned bunkers.
Most of the dead were non Afghans, and included Chechens and Uzbeks as well as corpses with Mongol features, Hagenbeck said. U.S. officials said they were holding about 20 prisoners who were being interrogated.
Pentagon officials had repeatedly said the only choice facing the enemy troops was to “surrender or die,” although Afghan commanders had been prepared to allow them to leave.
Leading the final assault were Afghan commanders Zia Lodin and Gul Haider, who had floated the idea of a negotiated exit.
“There are some fighters who have escaped?we think to Pakistan,” said Shurkurullah, an Afghan commander.
In an attempt to block their departure, U.S. helicopter gunships, including Marine Cobras, blasted cave entrances Wednesday with rocket and machine gun fire. The Canadians, who were joined by about 100 U.S. troops, made their way up icy mountain trails, carefully avoiding unexploded ordnance littering the area after days of intense American airstrikes.
The number of enemy fighters still in the valley had dropped to “double digits,” Hagenbeck said.
Hagenbeck acknowledged that some civilians were killed in the fighting, though he did not say how many.