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Wednesday, 10 October, 2001, 14:47 GMT 15:47 UK
Taleban denies US air supremacy claim
The air strikes have entered a fourth day
The Taleban authorities in Afghanistan have dismissed claims by the United States that it has gained virtual air supremacy over the country after three days of attacks.
The Taleban ambassador to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, said American planes were flying out of range and had not destroyed Afghan defences.
In the capital, Kabul, Taleban officials said that a number of people had been killed after a residential area was struck during overnight US air raids. With the air strikes now in their fourth day Pentagon officials said that the Taleban's air defences had been virtually wiped out. "Essentially we have air supremacy over Afghanistan now," Air Force General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said. 'Out of range' But this is disputed by Mr Zaeef who said the "claim that they destroyed the defence capability of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan is not true."
"American planes are flying very high and they are not in the range of the defence system that we have." "As we know, we do not have that sophisticated and modern defence system, but that they have destroyed our defence capability is not true," he added. Mr Zaeef also rejected claims by the opposition Northern Alliance that they had made advances against Taleban forces since the military strikes began. Bin Laden free to fight Mr Zaeef warned that as long as the air raids continued America would not be safe. "As long as America is shedding the blood of Afghans it will not be beneficial to America. If America is continuing attacks on Afghanistan it will also not be safe," he said.
The Taleban has lifted its restrictions on Osama Bin Laden giving him free rein to battle the United States. "Now that America has begun its war against Muslims, the situation is totally changed, and there are no restrictions on Osama," Abdul Hai Muttman, spokesman for the regime told the BBC's Pashtu service. "Jihad is an obligation on all Muslims of the world. We want this, Bin Laden wants this and America will face the unpleasant consequences," he said. Previously Bin Laden had been barred from using telephones, fax machines and the internet. In other developments:
Earlier a spokesman for Osama Bin Laden's militant group, al-Qaeda, delivered a defiant statement urging all Muslims to join in a holy war against the United States and to attack American interests around the world. In a message broadcast by the Qatar-based television station al-Jazeera, al-Qaeda spokesman, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, praised the suicide attacks against America on 11 September and said there would be more of them.
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