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Central Asia/Russia
'Bridge of Friendship' links foes once again
By Tarek Mahmood
Special to Globalvision News Network
TERMIZ, Uzbekistan - Every day Abdullah Jahangirov Izzatullaevich sees anywhere
between 80 and 1,000 pilgrims come his way to the ancient mosque of el-Hakim
at-Termizi, where he is the caretaker. They all come from the north, praying in
the 2,500-year-old structure in the belief that one visit, one prayer here, is
worth at least 71 times the prayers offered almost anywhere else.
The pilgrims also come to bask and reflect in the mosque's aura and history,
carrying the hope that any illnesses plaguing them will disperse. They can
stroll through a garden of roses and a bounty of apricots, cherries, apples,
dates, peaches and arbors of grapes, listen to the choruses of myna birds and
contemplate the philosophy of the mosque's founder.
But no pilgrims come from the south. Just behind the mosque and the garden,
tranquil nature is harshly shattered. There is an electric fence, followed by
deep cuts in the ground and then a flat, hard earth surface perforated by small
lumps where land mines are buried. This is the no-man's land along Uzbekistan's
southern boundary, a 100-300-meter strip leading to the Amu Darya River and,
beyond its swift current, a few lights burning in Afghanistan.
"They say some terrorists and some other forces are fighting and I don't
understand who is killing whom," says Izzatullaevich, 45. "I come here early in
the morning and leave late at night. I'm not concerned with what is going on. My
country will provide my security. I'm just doing my job. The president will
secure my safety."
An uneasy peace exists in Termiz, the place in Uzbekistan where concerns of a
wider conflict are strongest. Some residents insist they can feel the ground
move when US bombs strike Mazar-e-Sharif, 65 miles south in Afghanistan. Others
say they can hear the swoosh and then the explosion of the bombs. Still others
tell of riding the town's ferris wheel to the very top and seeing the black
smoke rising.
"If we assist American troops, we could have problems with our neighbors and
they could not forgive us," said Natasha Vusik, 45, who cares for the birds at
the Termiz zoo. "I hope that we will not be harmed."
Termiz was the major staging area for the Soviet Union's 1979-1989 war in
Afghanistan. The electric fence which runs behind the mosque spans the entire
85-mile border between Uzbekistan and Afghanistan. Until the war ended, and even
after Uzbekistan became independent from the Soviet Union, Termiz and its
environs were a closed military zone, off limits to visitors.
Now its citizens are waiting, acknowledging a war in a nearby land but still so
far away. They and their civic leaders try to carry on with life as usual, but
like the wind and dust storms which flare up here like clockwork, uncontrollable
outside forces have intruded.
Standing in the zoo, looking across the river into Afghanistan, one can see how
close the conflict is. Anti-Taliban forces are shelling positions in northern
Afghanistan, softening them up for an assault, and the puffs of smoke can be
seen. And through the night, warplanes can be heard, their roar competing with
barking dogs and a late-night wedding party reveller.
Two planes with no markings were spotted on the runway at a military base in
nearby Karshi on Saturday; another was visible on Sunday. But police and the
military threw up new roadblocks and deployed personnel along back roads to
prevent reporters getting a close look.
The first US troops deployed in the new war against terrorism - and the first
ever deployed on territory of the former Soviet Union - were to settle into
their new home at an Uzbek military base over the weekend. The timing of their
first action in hostile territory miles south in Afghanistan remains unknown,
but for now they are on very, very friendly territory. Among those who have
heard about the soldiers, most think they are here to defend Uzbekistan from
terrorists.
That idea had resonance after reports reached here Sunday that the Taliban had
moved troops to its northern border with Uzbekistan; last week the Taliban
warned it would strike Uzbekistan if the nation permitted US troops to operate
from its bases. "US personnel are already here, I can confirm that," Uzbekistan
President Islam Karimov told reporters. "With the inhuman face of terrorism, we
cannot afford to stand aside."
Termiz was to celebrate its 2,500th birthday in late October, but the ceremony
has been postponed because of cotton production and the Afghan fighting. The
government has ordered that construction of new buildings be completed before
then, but a drop in economic activity in the region means the meager structures
standing forlornly in open fields are unlikely to meet that edict.
"America is doing right in this action now," says Karem Kholnaza, 49, a veteran
of the Soviet army's ill-fated war. "It has to be paid back. The sinner has to
be punished."
There is one road into Afghanistan, across the Bridge of Friendship. Heading
toward the bridge, the wind and dust picks up, the clusters of homes get smaller
and the waves of cotton plants - "white gold" as the crop is called in the
tourist brochures here - give way to rows of corn. Abruptly there is flatness
and mud and barrenness and then a lone guard tower appears at the crossroads
hamlet of Okhunbabaev. Then comes Highway M-39: north to Tashkent, east to the
Tajikistan border and south across the Bridge of Friendship into Afghanistan.
Turn toward Afghanistan and there is a faded billboard with dusty red letters
exhorting motorists that "To Love The Motherland is the Duty of Every Citizen."
But there is no one on the road, except a young boy softly using his stick on
the hides of five cattle. Neither he nor his herd heed the billboard or the
lone police car idling in its shadow, parked there to make sure the inquisitive
do not proceed further south.
The Bridge of Friendship was build by the military, with engineers and laborers
brought in from Moscow. It was constructed for motor and rail traffic, and
Soviet troops and materiel poured over it during the Afghan war. The casualties
came the other way. The bridge was closed in 1997.
Now soldiers stand ready should the Taliban attempt to cross the river and the
bridge to disrupt Termiz. "The Taliban could not approach the border," said
Rashid Kulmatov, the vice rector of Termiz University. "There are no mountains
for them to hide in." Adds Izzatullaevich, the caretaker at the mosque: "Our
soldiers will not open the gates and say welcome. They are doing their duty 100
percent."
President Karimov has said he will consider the request of humanitarian groups
to reopen the bridge to permit aid to go into Afghanistan. But the betting in
Termiz is that the bridge would only reopen to let the next round of troops flow
into the Afghan mountains.
A favorite rumor is that Afghanistan's anti-Taliban Northern Alliance will
succeed in taking Maraz-e-Shaif, the most important city and most important
runway in northern Afghanistan. That is where the famed General Abdurrashid
Dostum, who once helped the Soviets and then switched sides to help defeat them,
made a stand in a mud fortress against the Taliban.
Dostum is reportedly closing in on Maraz-e-Sharif again, and after he regains
control - so goes the speculation - the bridge will reopen and the road will be
cleared for the 65-mile spurt from Termiz to Mazar-e-Sharif - with US supply
trucks leading the way.
En route, they might pass strong testimonies to the aftermath of the last Afghan
war. Many here recommend heeding these before a new force decides to cross the
Friendship Bridge. In a vast field about two miles away from the mosque is a
cemetery, not of bodies but of the crumpled remains of tanks and artillery,
broken and defeated during the Soviet campaign in Afghanistan. More than 100
tanks, their turrets and barrels poking out of mounds of windswept dirt, offer a
chilling monument to a political and military disaster inflicted on a
superpower.
The tank cemetery is near a series of earthen circles, seven originally, that
were designed to defend old Termiz. But those warriors, the defenders of a power
which ruled the area around old Termiz for almost four centuries, found they
could not match a fast moving, hit-and-run guerrilla force led by Genghis Khan.
They too were defeated, providing both an ancient and modern reminder that the
winds of victory here can shift very suddenly.
(© Globalvision News Network, 2001. All rights reserved.)
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