Group claims it kidnapped U.S.
soldiers
Since 06-21-06
Mon Jun 19, 2006
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An umbrella group linked to al-Qaida in Iraq claimed
Monday that it had kidnapped two American soldiers reported missing south of
Baghdad, where 8,000 Iraqi and U.S. troops were conducting a massive search.
The group, called the Mujahedeen Shura Council, also claimed it had kidnapped
four Russian diplomats and killed a fifth in Baghdad on June 3.
The message, which could not be authenticated, appeared on an Islamic Web site
known for publishing messages from insurgent groups in Iraq. U.S. officials have
said they were trying to confirm whether the two soldiers, who disappeared
Friday evening following an insurgent attack that also killed a U.S. soldier,
were kidnapped.
During the search for the missing Americans, U.S. spokesman Maj. Gen. William
Caldwell also said the military killed three suspected insurgents and detained
34 others in fighting that left seven U.S. servicemen wounded.
The Web posting said: "Your brothers in the military wing of the Mujahedeen
Shura Council kidnapped the two American soldiers near Youssifiya." It did not
identify the soldiers.
The Defense Department identified the missing men as Pfc. Kristian Menchaca, 23,
of Houston, and Pfc. Thomas L. Tucker, 25, of Madras, Ore.
It said Spc. David J. Babineau, 25, of Springfield, Mass., was killed. The three
were assigned to the 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 101st
Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky.
Gunmen kidnapped the four Russian diplomats near their embassy in Baghdad's
Mansour district after firing on their car and killing one embassy employee.
"God has enabled the lions of monotheism to arrest four Russian diplomats in
Iraq and kill the fifth," said a statement from the group on the same Web site.
The statement condemned Russian actions in Chechnya and criticized its presence
in Baghdad, saying: "The Russian government sends its diplomats to Iraq to
support the crusaders' project, led by America, and to provide international
backing and legitimacy to the exhausted Iraqi government."
The Mujahedeen Shura Council is a grouping of several insurgent forces,
including al-Qaida in Iraq. Former insurgent leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi helped
create the council in January — apparently to give an Iraqi face to his
movement, made up mainly of foreign fighters.
In the posting, the council taunted U.S. forces for failing to find the American
soldiers.
"The events reconfirm the weakness of the alleged American intelligence and its
going astray in Iraq," the statement said.
"The American military has launched a campaign of raids using armor and
equipment, in the region around the incident, but the army of 'the strongest
nation in the world' retreated in defeat and disgrace," the statement said. It
was signed by the information committee of the Mujahedeen Shura Council, a body
that groups five Iraqi insurgent organizations including al-Qaida in Iraq.
Fighter jets, helicopters, unmanned drones, boats and dive teams are being used
to find the two men who disappeared an attack on their checkpoint that left one
of their comrades dead, Caldwell said.
He did not comment on reports that the two men had been seized by insurgents,
saying only that they were listed as "duty status and whereabouts unknown."
Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said the soldiers appeared to have been taken
prisoner by insurgents. "Hopefully, they will be found and released as soon as
possible," he told CNN on Sunday.
Ahmed Khalaf Falah, a farmer who said he witnessed the abduction, told The
Associated Press that the two soldiers had been captured by seven masked gunmen
who were heavily armed during the attack near Youssifiyah, about 12 miles south
of Baghdad.
The town is in the "Triangle of Death," a predominantly Sunni region that has
been the scene of frequent ambushes by insurgents.
Menchaca's family members said they were hoping for his safe return upon
learning he was reported missing.
"I was 95 percent sure he was one of them," Menchaca's brother, Julio Cesar
Vasquez, of Houston, told AP late Sunday. "I already had an idea because he was
at a checkpoint."
Caldwell said seven other U.S. service members had been wounded during the
search. He said more than 8,000 U.S. and Iraqi troops were participating.
"While searching for our soldiers, we have engaged in a number of significant
actions against the anti-Iraqi forces," he said, adding that three insurgents
had been killed and 34 taken into custody.
Insurgents also continued to defy a security crackdown in Baghdad, although
violence appeared to have ebbed somewhat after several bloody attacks in recent
days.
A parked car bomb struck an Iraqi army convoy near a busy Baghdad square Monday,
killing five people, including four Iraqi soldiers, and wounding nine
passers-by, Lt. Ahmed Muhammad Ali said. A policeman also was gunned down in
western Baghdad.
U.S. and Iraqi troops also pushed into an eastern section of the western
insurgent stronghold of Ramadi in a campaign to gradually bolster their presence
in city neighborhoods that for months have largely been under insurgent control.
A U.S. gunship fired on suspected insurgents in the initial hours of the
operation, U.S. commanders said. Six men were thought to have been killed, and
sporadic exchanges of gunfire echoed throughout the neighborhood in the morning.
No U.S. casualties were initially reported.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, meanwhile, said Iraqi forces will take over
security next month in a southern province where Japanese troops are based.
The decision, announced after al-Maliki met with Japan's ambassador, does not
necessarily mean that any U.S.-led coalition forces will be withdrawn from
Muthana province.
Al-Maliki has said his national unity government plans to gradually take over
security for all of Iraq's 18 provinces within the next 18 months.
In another development, 500 detainees were released from U.S.-run detention
centers in Iraq, the Justice Ministry said, part of al-Maliki's plan to release
2,500 prisoners to promote national reconciliation.
The U.S. military also said the Central Criminal Court of Iraq has sentenced 29
insurgents to up to 15 years in prison for offenses ranging from possessing
illegal weapons to membership in armed groups. Five were foreigners, including
an Iranian who received six years in prison after he was caught entering the
country illegally.
The sentences were handed down between May 31 and June 13, according to the
statement. The court has tried 1,229 suspected insurgents and convicted 1,066,
it said.
In other violence Monday, according to police:
• An electrical worker identified as Saadoun Abdul-Hussein Radi, a former member
of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party, was gunned down as he was going to work in
downtown Amarah, 180 miles southeast of Baghdad.
• Gunmen killed police Col. Abdel-Shahid Saleh as he was heading to work west of
Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad.
• Gunmen trying to kill a former army major in the northern city of Mosul killed
a civilian and wounded their target.
• A sniper killed an Iraqi soldier 25 miles west of Baghdad. An Iraqi convoy
fired back at the attacker and two civilians were wounded.
• A roadside bomb missed a police patrol in Fallujah, killing three civilians.
• A roadside bomb exploded near a U.S. military convoy south of Hillah south of
Baghdad, killing one civilian and wounding four others.
___
Associated Press writers Sinan Salaheddin and Kim Gamel in Baghdad, Maamoun
Youssef in Cairo, Egypt, and Matt Joyce in Dallas contributed to this report.