TORA BORA, Afghanistan -- Enemy gunners hit two Americans on Friday as U.S. special forces joined Afghan guerrillas attacking an al-Qaida machine-gun nest in the Tora Bora mountains, alliance fighters said. A tribal leader claimed Osama bin Laden may be cornered in a nearby cave.
Two hundred al-Qaida fighters were encircled by eastern alliance soldiers at the suspected bin Laden base, said Hazrat Ali, security chief for the tribal alliance.
"I don't know, but I think there is a place inside where Osama is," Ali said. "We hope to catch Osama."
In Tora Bora's White Mountains, the 12-member U.S. special forces team joined three wings of eastern alliance fighters pressing al-Qaida positions.
Not identified
As the group came under heavy fire from a machine-gun nest, two Americans were grazed -- one in the shoulder, the other in the knee -- said Khawri, an Afghan assigned to fight with them. They were not identified.
Khawri, who goes by one name, said Afghans helped the Americans down the mountainside and bundled them into a truck.
Gen. Tommy Franks, the U.S. commander of the war, said he had no information on Americans being wounded but could not rule it out.
Franks said Afghan fighters had taken al-Qaida prisoners Friday. He said he would not know until at least today how many prisoners were taken or whether any were senior leaders of bin Laden's terrorist network. He said they would be screened by U.S. forces.
In southern Afghanistan, U.S. Marines seized the Kandahar Airport and are expected to transfer the bulk of their forces there in the largest mobilization since setting up a desert base nearby on Nov. 25.
Hundreds of Marines were checking for mines and booby traps in the terminal building, and a commander declared the runway fit for aircraft. The airport is to become a major arrival point for humanitarian aid that will be desperately needed as winter settles on Afghanistan.
In the White Mountains, Khawri, the Afghan assigned to fight with the U.S. special forces, said the troops pointed a device that looked to him like a box at the al-Qaida post while Afghan fighters fired on the machine-gunners.
U.S. forces appeared to be using a laser to mark targets for laser-guided munitions. Khawri said a bomb hit the machine-gun nest soon afterward.
"We went up there and there was nothing left. Everything was destroyed," Khawri said. "There was one dead person. The body was in the branches of a tree."
Franks said it was a "pitched" battle around Tora Bora, and estimated there were between 300 and 1,000 al-Qaida fighters.
Later, Afghan fighters claimed to be closing in on 500-600 al-Qaida members cornered in the forested mountains and to have encircled at least 100 of the 200-member force defending the cave that Ali believed could be bin Laden's lair.
'Cannot escape'
"They are surrounded and they cannot escape," Ali said. He did not say why he thought bin Laden was in the cave.
Atiqullah Racham, a top aide to commander Haji Zahir, said heavy U.S. bombing prevented fighters from entering the cave Friday, but "tomorrow we hope to have good news for you: the fall of al-Qaida."
Racham said eastern alliance forces captured other caves Friday and found blank U.S. and European passports, religious books and letters.
Commanders do not know where other al-Qaida fighters have fled, but speculate they are holed up in an 8-square-mile forest over the ridge of a nearby mountain. The Pakistan frontier is just miles away.
A large fire bomb fell on the forest Friday evening, sending up a fireball that was visible two miles away. U.S. bombers and AC-130 Spectre gunships circled over the ridge where the suspect cave was located, pounding defensive positions.
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