![]() | This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's rough notes page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. |
This is not an article.
This userspace page contains rough notes to support wikipedia articles on training camps that WP:RS assert had ties to terrorism.
Indian intelligence estimated that the Taliban allowed militant groups to operate approximately one hundred training camps in Afghanistan. Some of the there were run by the al Qaeda. [1] Some were run by militant groups that were training forces to fight against their governments, in neighbouring countries -- like Uzbekistan. Others were apparently run by militant groups that were not subservient to al Qaeda, and weren't tied to nationalist groups.
How many camps did al Qaida run? Some sources estimate they operated over a dozen camps.
How many camps do OARDEC memos mention, where the memos explicitly state, or imply the camp was associated with the Taliban or al Qaida? Over three dozen.
A paper published by a group at the USMA at West Point identified a dozen camps in a table, and identified several dozen other camp where the memos only mentioned a couple of alleged trainees.
Some memos identified camps ran by the Taliban itself.
I had some separate userspace page, each devoted to a single camp. Some of these had been in article space. I either moved them to userspace on my own initiative, of asked for them to be userified, after they were deleted.
I plan to amalgamate a list of all the less notable camps, here.
In the {{ afd}} of those former articles that had been deleted following an {{ afd}}, many of those voicing a delete stated that a single article could handle all the camps that had not received considerable specific coverage individually.
DoD name | alternate names |
notes |
---|---|---|
Sheik Sanif training camp |
| |
Al Ghanad training camp | ||
Shamsad training camp |
| |
Mehrez training camp |
| |
Kara Karga training camp | ||
Libyan Islamic Fighting Group training camp | LIFG training camp |
|
Al Fand training camp |
| |
Qulio Urdo training camp | ||
Torkhum training camp | Torkham training camp |
|
Samar Khaila training camp |
| |
Libyan training camp |
| |
Murad Beek training camp |
| |
Markaz-e-Taiba | ||
Muridke | ||
Manshera | ||
Lashkar E Tayyiba training camp | LET training camp |
|
Al Sadeeq training camp |
| |
Al Ghuraba training camp |
| |
Pakistani Center 5 |
| |
Dimaj Institute |
Sources told CNN that more than 120 camps are operating in the two countries.mirror
The detainee was at the al Farouq camp and was trained on explosives, chemicals, pistols and rifles plus assassination methods. He also trained on how to make poisons at the Kara Karga camp outside of Kabul.
The detainee found out that there would be lessons on making explosive mixtures in the Kara Karga region.
Instruction at Kara Karga also included lessons on how to make poisons that could be inhaled, swallowed, or absorbed through the skin.
The detainee received weapons training ( AK-47, sniper rifle, RPGs, and 82mm mortars) at two Libyan training camps located within Afghanistan Torkhum and Samar Khaila]]).
Libyan training camp annex, outside of Kabul: A Libyan military training camp, known only as "the Libyan camp]]", is located in Kabul, Afghanistan. There is an annex to the camp also used for military training. It is an unknown distance from the main camp. The annex has an average of 10 to 12 students at a time and one trainer. (FN9)
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The detainee trained at the Libyan Camp Annex in the vicinity of Kabul, Afghanistan.
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The detainee attended urban warfare camp at a training camp in the city of Murad Beek.
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The detainee attended the Lashkar e Tayyiba training camp in Afghanistan and received training on the Kalashnikov rifle. ... The detainee's training at the camp consisted of mountain hiking, weapons assembly/disassembly, and weapons firing. ... Weapons training was accomplished on a pistol, a Kalashnikov rifle, and a German-made G-3 rifle.
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Detainee traveled from his home in Saudi Arabia to Afghanistan in 1989 using an Arab guest house in Pakistan. In Afghanistan the detainee trained at the al-Siddeek training camp where he received instruction on the AK-47.
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The detainee attended the Al-Siddeek camp. The Al-Siddeek camp was located near Khowst, Afghanistan and the detainee received physical exercise and training on the Kalashnikov.
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The detainee received weapons training at al Qaida's al Ghuraba camp in Kabul.
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The detainee received three months of weapons training at the al-Ghuraba Camp in Kabul.
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The detainee received three months of weapons training at the al-Ghuraba Camp in Kabul.
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Detainee received weapons training at Pakistani Center 5 for approximately five months. He was instructed in the use RPGs and Kalashnikov [ sic] rifles and was regularly assigned guard duty while at this camp.
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Detainee studied for six months at the Dimaj Institute. The Dimaj Institute is a known terrorist training center.
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The detainee studied for six months at the al Dimaj Institute in Sadah, Yemen under Sheikh Muqbuil al Wadi. The al Dimaj Institute (Training Center) was used for indoctrination and recruiting grounds for foreign extremists/terrorists seeking entry into other paramilitary or jihad organizations.
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![]() | This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's rough notes page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. |
This is not an article.
This userspace page contains rough notes to support wikipedia articles on training camps that WP:RS assert had ties to terrorism.
Indian intelligence estimated that the Taliban allowed militant groups to operate approximately one hundred training camps in Afghanistan. Some of the there were run by the al Qaeda. [1] Some were run by militant groups that were training forces to fight against their governments, in neighbouring countries -- like Uzbekistan. Others were apparently run by militant groups that were not subservient to al Qaeda, and weren't tied to nationalist groups.
How many camps did al Qaida run? Some sources estimate they operated over a dozen camps.
How many camps do OARDEC memos mention, where the memos explicitly state, or imply the camp was associated with the Taliban or al Qaida? Over three dozen.
A paper published by a group at the USMA at West Point identified a dozen camps in a table, and identified several dozen other camp where the memos only mentioned a couple of alleged trainees.
Some memos identified camps ran by the Taliban itself.
I had some separate userspace page, each devoted to a single camp. Some of these had been in article space. I either moved them to userspace on my own initiative, of asked for them to be userified, after they were deleted.
I plan to amalgamate a list of all the less notable camps, here.
In the {{ afd}} of those former articles that had been deleted following an {{ afd}}, many of those voicing a delete stated that a single article could handle all the camps that had not received considerable specific coverage individually.
DoD name | alternate names |
notes |
---|---|---|
Sheik Sanif training camp |
| |
Al Ghanad training camp | ||
Shamsad training camp |
| |
Mehrez training camp |
| |
Kara Karga training camp | ||
Libyan Islamic Fighting Group training camp | LIFG training camp |
|
Al Fand training camp |
| |
Qulio Urdo training camp | ||
Torkhum training camp | Torkham training camp |
|
Samar Khaila training camp |
| |
Libyan training camp |
| |
Murad Beek training camp |
| |
Markaz-e-Taiba | ||
Muridke | ||
Manshera | ||
Lashkar E Tayyiba training camp | LET training camp |
|
Al Sadeeq training camp |
| |
Al Ghuraba training camp |
| |
Pakistani Center 5 |
| |
Dimaj Institute |
Sources told CNN that more than 120 camps are operating in the two countries.mirror
The detainee was at the al Farouq camp and was trained on explosives, chemicals, pistols and rifles plus assassination methods. He also trained on how to make poisons at the Kara Karga camp outside of Kabul.
The detainee found out that there would be lessons on making explosive mixtures in the Kara Karga region.
Instruction at Kara Karga also included lessons on how to make poisons that could be inhaled, swallowed, or absorbed through the skin.
The detainee received weapons training ( AK-47, sniper rifle, RPGs, and 82mm mortars) at two Libyan training camps located within Afghanistan Torkhum and Samar Khaila]]).
Libyan training camp annex, outside of Kabul: A Libyan military training camp, known only as "the Libyan camp]]", is located in Kabul, Afghanistan. There is an annex to the camp also used for military training. It is an unknown distance from the main camp. The annex has an average of 10 to 12 students at a time and one trainer. (FN9)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee trained at the Libyan Camp Annex in the vicinity of Kabul, Afghanistan.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help) Cite error: The named reference "ArbSummaryOfEvidenceZuhailAbdoAnamSaidAlSharabi" was defined multiple times with different content (see the
help page).
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee attended urban warfare camp at a training camp in the city of Murad Beek.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee attended the Lashkar e Tayyiba training camp in Afghanistan and received training on the Kalashnikov rifle. ... The detainee's training at the camp consisted of mountain hiking, weapons assembly/disassembly, and weapons firing. ... Weapons training was accomplished on a pistol, a Kalashnikov rifle, and a German-made G-3 rifle.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
Detainee traveled from his home in Saudi Arabia to Afghanistan in 1989 using an Arab guest house in Pakistan. In Afghanistan the detainee trained at the al-Siddeek training camp where he received instruction on the AK-47.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee attended the Al-Siddeek camp. The Al-Siddeek camp was located near Khowst, Afghanistan and the detainee received physical exercise and training on the Kalashnikov.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee received weapons training at al Qaida's al Ghuraba camp in Kabul.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee received three months of weapons training at the al-Ghuraba Camp in Kabul.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee received three months of weapons training at the al-Ghuraba Camp in Kabul.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
Detainee received weapons training at Pakistani Center 5 for approximately five months. He was instructed in the use RPGs and Kalashnikov [ sic] rifles and was regularly assigned guard duty while at this camp.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
Detainee studied for six months at the Dimaj Institute. The Dimaj Institute is a known terrorist training center.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)
The detainee studied for six months at the al Dimaj Institute in Sadah, Yemen under Sheikh Muqbuil al Wadi. The al Dimaj Institute (Training Center) was used for indoctrination and recruiting grounds for foreign extremists/terrorists seeking entry into other paramilitary or jihad organizations.
{{
cite web}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help); Text "}" ignored (
help)