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Boom
06-19-06, 08:27
Al Qaeda-Linked Group Claims Kidnapping of GIs

Monday, June 19, 2006
Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq — An umbrella group that includes Al Qaeda in Iraq claimed in a Web statement Monday that it had kidnapped two U.S. soldiers reported missing south of Baghdad.

There was no immediate confirmation that the statement was credible, although it appeared on a Web site often used by Al Qaeda-linked groups. U.S. officials have said they were trying to confirm whether the missing soldiers were kidnapped.

"Your brothers in the military wing of the Mujahedeen Shura Council kidnapped the two American soldiers near Youssifiya," the group said in a statement posted on an Islamic Web site.

The Web site did not name the soldiers.

The U.S. military said Monday that seven American troops have been wounded, three insurgents have been killed and 34 detained during an intensive search for two soldiers.

Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq, said fighter jets, unmanned aerial vehicles and dive teams had been deployed to find the two men. The men went missing Friday during an attack on their checkpoint in the volatile Sunni area south of Baghdad that left one of their comrades dead.

"We have surged intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance platforms and employed planes, boats, helicopters and UAVs to ensure the most thorough search possible on the ground, in the air and in the water," Caldwell said in a statement issued Monday.

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." He said seven other U.S. service members had been wounded in action during the search efforts that began Friday night.

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, Springfield, Mass., was killed in the attack. The three were assigned to the 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky.

Caldwell said more than 8,000 U.S. and Iraqi troops were participating in the search.

"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.

He also said the military had received 63 tips and had launched 12 cordon and search operations, eight air assaults and 280 flight hours were logged.

"Approximately 12 villages have been cleared in the area, and we continue to engage local citizens for help and information leading to the whereabouts of our soldiers," he said, without elaborating.

Voodoochild
06-19-06, 10:30
Let's all say our prayers for those in captivity. Speaking with my brother and father this weekend both of whom are Marines. Basicaly if the captors do anything to harm them it will wind up in complete devastation for those behind the kidnapping.

Razoreye
06-19-06, 12:16
Time for some SpecOps to get our boys back!

M4arc
06-19-06, 18:16
I hope we can get those guys back...

M4arc
06-20-06, 06:39
Unfortunately it looks like they found the bodies of the two missing solders :(

u-baddog
06-20-06, 07:59
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=politicsNews&storyID=2006-06-20T121327Z_01_N20403014_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ-USA-SOLDIERS-BODIES.xml

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon said on Tuesday that two unidentified bodies were found south of Baghdad but did not confirm they were the U.S. soldiers who were abducted by Iraqi insurgents late last week, CNN reported.

An Iraqi defense official said earlier the soldiers who went missing were killed and their bodies were found in an area south of Baghdad where a group linked to al Qaeda said it had abducted them.

The two bodies showed signs of torture, Fox News Channel reported, citing reports to Iraqi defense-ministry officials by civilians who had found the bodies. Fox said that according to the reports, "there were marks of torture all over the bodies."

Pvt. Thomas Lowell Tucker, 25, from Madras, Oregon, and Private Kristian Menchaca, 23, of Houston, went missing at dusk on Friday after an ambush at a checkpoint in Yusufiya, a town south of Baghdad in an area considered an al Qaeda stronghold.



Maj. William Wilhoute, spokesman for the multinational forces in Iraq, told CNN he could not confirm whether the bodies that had been found were the two missing soldiers, and could not say whether the bodies had been tortured.

Voodoochild
06-20-06, 14:36
I vote for dropping Daisy Cutters. These sorry ****s have to learn that we arent ****ing around. The gloves should come off if it offends people over ther thne too bad. I send my thoughts and prayers out to the families of all the lost ones.

Boom
06-20-06, 16:49
Damn......Man I hope they get whats coming to them. Bastards :mad:

M4arc
06-20-06, 17:02
I vote for dropping Daisy Cutters. These sorry ****s have to learn that we arent ****ing around. The gloves should come off if it offends people over ther thne too bad. I send my thoughts and prayers out to the families of all the lost ones.

Is carpet bombing pollitically correct these days?

Hawkeye
06-20-06, 17:33
Supposedly, the new leader of AQ in Iraq personally killed them.

I think we should type up a stern warning and send it to him............................strapped to a 1k lb J-DAM.

Voodoochild
06-20-06, 19:35
Is carpet bombing pollitically correct these days?

Good question. More over is Naplam in style these days?