Skip to comments.
Marines find bodies of four American soldiers
The New York Times via The Houston Chronicle ^
| March 29, 2003, 12:21AM
| Unattributed
Posted on 03/28/2003 11:04:35 PM PST by SlickWillard
March 29, 2003, 12:21AM
Marines find bodies of four American soldiers
New York Times
WITH V CORPS HEADQUARTERS NEAR THE KUWAIT BORDER -- The bodies of four American soldiers were found by Marines on Friday in a shallow grave in the battle-worn town of Nasiriyah, near the Euphrates River.
U.S. Military officials said they believe the four were executed by Iraqi paramilitary forces after being seized in an ambush on Sunday.
Military officials declined to speculate as to whether the four were among those who were shown alive by the Arab television network last weekend. The military had heard reports that the soldiers were executed after they were shown on the Arab network, but there was no confirmation.
On Friday, a Marine unit found the four bodies in a freshly dug grave near a house in the northeast corner of the town of al-Jazeera. An Army official said the four bodies were clothed in U.S. military uniforms.
Today, the military were flying in a forensic team, military investigators and a member of the V Corps Staff Judge Advocate's office to the site. Officers said that the military was tentatively treating the deaths as a war crime.
The soldiers seized in the ambush have been listed as missing in action. The 507th Maintenance Co. is attached to the 3rd Infantry Division.
Officers of V Corps said the names of the dead would be released after their families were notified.
The ambush occurred in Nasiriyah, in southeastern Iraq.
According to Army officers, soldiers of the 507th Maintenance Unit were traveling on Highway 1, a main north-south artery, in darkness in a convoy of six vehicles. The unit was en route to supply an antiaircraft battery.
The convoy made a wrong turn, mistakenly leaving Highway 1. Officials said they believed that as the Americans realized their mistake, they turned around and quickly encountered two Iraqi T-55 tanks and an advancing Iraqi military unit. The soldiers came under rocket and small-arms fire.
In the fight that followed, the first of the two cars, a Humvee, the standard Army vehicle and a tool truck, were separated from the other four. An Army captain in the Humvee -- the senior officer -- drove the vehicle carrying wounded soldiers through the gunfire. According to one account, the officer drove nearly four miles before being forced to stop because his tires had been crippled by gunshots.
The officer sought to change the tires of the Humvee, when an American Marine unit on patrol saw him and the soldiers in his vehicle, officers said. The Marines called in a helicopter, which evacuated the officer and his wounded soldiers. Some were seriously wounded, one of them shot in the jaw.
The Marines resumed their patrol in search of the Fedayeen, the paramilitary force. Within minutes, they came upon two American vehicles, damaged by bullets. Two other vehicles were burning. No Americans were in sight.
Hours later, grim photos of American soldiers were shown on the Arab network al-Jazeera. Some appeared to have been executed, with bullet wounds to the head. The uniforms of others were stained with blood.
Within 24 hours, the Army was hearing reports that some of the soldiers had been executed.
TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: ambush; army; casualties; gutsandglory; marines; nasiriyah; warcrimes
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 201-219 next last
To: EternalVigilance
I'm very curious to see if the young woman from WV in among them. She was part of this group of soldiers, but never showed up on their video horror show. Her name is Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, 19, Palestine, W.Va. Cute little blonde, and I shudder to think what these animals did or are doing to her.
Country girl ... Jessica
To: EternalVigilance
Yes, that's correct.
22
posted on
03/28/2003 11:22:30 PM PST
by
AntiGuv
(™)
To: SlickWillard
At least we have the (very) small comfort of knowing that every single one of those paramilities is destined for death and Hell. Everything I've read and heard is that we're not playing nice with the amateur murderers. We see them, they die. Period. The Geneva Convention doesn't apply to them.
23
posted on
03/28/2003 11:22:42 PM PST
by
Timesink
(If you use the word "embedded" in a conversation, you'd better be carrying an x-ray to show me.)
To: EternalVigilance
Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, 22, Tuba City, Ariz.Don't know, but there is also a young soldier named Michael Williams, I think, from AZ missing.
To: AHerald
It feels kinda like 9/11, doesn't it.
Sad, but extremely pissed...
To: Mad_Tom_Rackham
Tom, this makes me sick. We will not and should not kill`em all but, them with their hands up better keep them up.
The Aussies just reported that ben lousing alot lately`s boys are involved in the fight at Basra.
26
posted on
03/28/2003 11:24:57 PM PST
by
bybybill
(first the public employees, next the fish and, finally, the children)
To: Timesink
My rage at these animals is near total.
But I save some small bit of it for the PC idiots that ever allowed women in a combat zone!!!!!!!!!
To: SlickWillard
prayers up for Jessica and all the brave souls facing those crap bastards.
28
posted on
03/28/2003 11:26:07 PM PST
by
herewego
To: dixiechick2000
To: SlickWillard
I can think of quite a few options, while we are "resting" for 4-6 days...
These animals must be PUT DOWN...and soon!!
30
posted on
03/28/2003 11:28:52 PM PST
by
JudgeAmint
(from DA Judge!!)
To: EternalVigilance
Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, 22, Tuba City, Ariz. I thought I posted this but didn't see it go through.
There is another young soldier named Michael Williams (I think) from AZ that is missing.
To: SlickWillard
Here is that list:
Coalition Troop Casualties, POWs, MIAs (Less We Forget)
U.S. and British troop casualties from the war. U.S. totals (which include only those identified by military or confirmed by family members): 28 dead, seven captured, 16 missing. British total: 22 dead.
DEATHS:
March 26:
Marine Maj. Kevin G. Nave, 36, White Lake Township, Mich., vehicle accident
March 25:
Air Force Maj. Gregory Stone, 40, Boise, Idaho, grenade attack
Navy Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Michael Vann Johnson Jr., 25, Little Rock, Ark., combat.
March 24:
Marine Cpl. Evan James, 20, La Harpe, Ill., drowned in canal
Marine Sgt. Bradley S. Korthaus, 29, Davenport, Iowa, drowned in canal
Army Spc. Gregory P. Sanders, 19, Hobart, Ind., combat
March 23:
Army Spc. Jamaal R. Addison, 22, Roswell, Ga., combat
Marine Sgt. Michael E. Bitz, 31, Ventura, Calif., combat
Marine Lance Cpl. Brian Rory Buesing, 20, Cedar Key, Fla., combat
Marine Lance Cpl. David K. Fribley, 26, Fort Myers, Fla., combat
Marine Cpl. Jose A. Garibay, 21, Costa Mesa, Calif., combat
Marine Cpl. Jorge A. Gonzalez, 20, Los Angeles, combat
Army Pfc. Howard Johnson II, 21, Mobile, Ala., combat
Marine Staff Sgt. Phillip A. Jordan, 42, Enfield, Conn., combat
Marine 2nd Lt. Frederick E. Pokorney Jr., 31, Tonopah, Nev., combat
Marine Cpl. Randal Kent Rosacker, 21, San Diego, combat
Marine Lance Cpl. Thomas J. Slocum, 22, Thornton, Colo., combat
March 22:
Navy Lt. Thomas Mullen Adams, 27, La Mesa, Calif., helicopter collision
Marine Lance Cpl. Eric J. Orlowski, 26, Buffalo, N.Y., machine gun accident
Army Capt. Christopher Scott Seifert, 27, Easton, Pa., grenade attack
Army Reserve Spc. Brandon S. Tobler, 19, Portland, Ore., vehicle accident
March 21:
Marine Maj. Jay Thomas Aubin, 36, Waterville, Maine, helicopter crash
Marine Capt. Ryan Anthony Beaupre, 30, St. Anne, Ill., helicopter crash
Marine 2nd Lt. Therrel S. Childers, 30, Harrison County, Miss., combat
Marine Lance Cpl. Jose Gutierrez, 22, Los Angeles, combat
Marine Cpl. Brian Matthew Kennedy, 25, Houston, helicopter crash
Marine Staff Sgt. Kendall Damon Waters-Bey, 29, Baltimore, helicopter crash
Date not given:
Marine Sgt. Nicolas M. Hodson, 22, Smithville, Mo., vehicle accident
CAPTURED:
March 24:
Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 Ronald D. Young Jr., 26, Lithia Springs, Ga.
Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 David S. Williams, 30, Orlando, Fla.
March 23:
Army Spc. Edgar Hernandez, 21, Mission, Texas
Army Spc. Joseph Hudson, 23, Alamogordo, N.M.
Army Spc. Shoshana Johnson, 30, Fort Bliss, Texas
Army Pfc. Patrick Miller, 23, Park City, Kan.
Army Sgt. James Riley, 31, Pennsauken, N.J.
MISSING:
March 23:
Marine Lance Cpl. Thomas A. Blair, 24, Broken Arrow, Okla.
Marine Pfc. Tamario D. Burkett, 21, Buffalo, N.Y.
Marine Cpl. Kemaphoom A. Chanawongse, 22, Waterford, Conn.
Marine Lance Cpl. Donald J. Cline, Jr., Sparks, Nev.
Marine Pvt. Jonathan L. Gifford, 30, Decatur, Ill.
Marine Pvt. Nolen R. Hutchings, 19, Boiling Springs, S.C.
Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, 19, Palestine, W.Va.
Army Spc. James Kiehl, 22, Comfort, Texas
Marine Lance Cpl. Patrick R. Nixon, 21, Gallatin, Tenn.
Army Pvt. Brandon Sloan, 19, Bedford Heights, Ohio
Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, 22, Tuba City, Ariz.
Army Sgt. Donald Walters, 33, Salem, Ore.
Army Master Sgt. Robert J. Dowdy, 38, Cleveland
Army Pvt. Ruben Estrella-Soto, 18, El Paso, Texas
Army Chief Warrant Officer Johnny Villareal Mata, 35, El Paso, Texas
Marine Lance Cpl. Michael J. Williams, 31, Arizona
OTHER COALITION CASUALTIES:
DEATHS:
British:
March 25:
Cpl. Stephen John Allbutt, Stoke-on-Trent, England, tank hit by friendly fire.
Trooper David Jeffrey Clarke, Littleworth, England, tank hit by friendly fire.
March 24:
Sgt. Steven Mark Roberts, Bradford, England, combat
Lance Cpl. Barry Stephen, Perth, Scotland, combat
March 23:
Sapper Luke Allsopp, London, England, combat
Staff Sgt. Simon Cullingworth, Essex, England, combat
Flight Lt. Kevin Barry Main, jet shot down by friendly fire
Flight Lt. David Rhys Williams, jet shot down by friendly fire
March 22:
Lt. Philip Green, helicopter collision
Lt. Marc Lawrence, helicopter collision
Lt. Antony King, Helston, England, helicopter collision
Lt. Philip West, Budock Water, England, helicopter collision
Lt. James Williams, Falmouth, England, helicopter collision
Lt. Andrew Wilson, helicopter collision
March 21:
Color Sgt. John Cecil, Plymouth, England, helicopter crash
Lance Bombardier Llewelyn Karl Evans, Llandudno, Wales, helicopter crash
Capt. Philip Stuart Guy, helicopter crash
Marine Sholto Hedenskog, helicopter crash
Sgt. Les Hehir, Poole, England, helicopter crash
Operator Mechanic Second Class Ian Seymour, helicopter crash
Warrant Officer Second Class Mark Stratford, helicopter crash
Maj. Jason Ward, helicopter crash
To: EternalVigilance
I'm very curious to see if the young woman from WV in among them. She was part of this group of soldiers, but never showed up on their video horror show. Take this for what it's worth, which isn't much I know, but every bit of chatter making its way through the WV state law enforcement community (which has a lot of overlap with the armed forces community, of course) on this subject has been bad.
If she's not amongst the recevently recovered referenced in the articles above, I fear she'll never be found, just like Scott Speicher.
33
posted on
03/28/2003 11:30:18 PM PST
by
Timesink
(If you use the word "embedded" in a conversation, you'd better be carrying an x-ray to show me.)
To: EternalVigilance
I woman taken 2 are "missing".
To: EternalVigilance
I agree. Women should NOT be in combat areas.
To: Timesink
An eerie similarity, to the desert of Iraq.
Time to take off the gloves..
Execution begets Execution
36
posted on
03/28/2003 11:36:08 PM PST
by
JudgeAmint
(from DA Judge!!)
To: SlickWillard
No, I don't. I refuse to let a bunch of two-bit, trailer trash yahoos trash my screen name. I'm from the Deep South...they are not.
They should be the Dixie Chickens.
BTW, I have taken some heat here because of my screen name. I didn't choose my name because I am a fan of theirs. Heck, I had not even heard of them when I chose my nic. I chose it because, while I live in Oregon, I was born and raised in Mississippi...my family is there, and that's where my heart is, and that's where it will always be.
Still have a problem?
To: valleygal
Missing soldier shocks Ariz. reservations
03/28/2003
By Lynn Ducey / Associated Press Writer
TUBA CITY -- In this wind-swept town on the sprawling Navajo reservation, an American flag flutters near a trailer home and a swing set moves in the breeze. A stream of solemn visitors silently pass by yellow balloons and signs offering support.
Pfc. Lori Piestewa is listed as missing in Iraq.
"The spirits are there and the angels have gone to keep her safe. Don't worry. We love you," reads one poster taped to a chain link fence.
Inside the home are the parents of Pfc. Lori Piestewa, who has been missing in Iraq since last weekend. The 23-year-old Hopi is the daughter of a Vietnam veteran, the granddaughter of a World War II veteran and a source of pride for Tuba City as one of the very few Indian women in the military.
"The town's kind of in a little shock," said one of the residents, Rick Holmes. "We can't have nothing done. We have to wait and see."
Piestewa is a member of the Army's 507th Maintenance Company, which was attacked by Iraqi soldiers last Sunday. At least two 507th soldiers were killed, and the Defense Department said eight more are missing and five are prisoners of war. Piestewa is among the missing.
This town of 8,200 people -- mostly a collection of government offices, a grocery store, a coin-operated laundry and a pizza parlor -- is marked by its dark red dirt and its tight-knit residents. It is on the Navajo Reservation but close to Hopi land.
"It's been a very sudden traumatic experience for everyone," said Vanessa Charles, spokeswoman for the Hopi Tribe. "These situations are the sort of things that bring people together. It unites people. It helps
people put their differences aside."
Officials from both tribes have attended prayer services in honor of Piestewa (pronounced pee-ESS-tuh-wah) and other military personnel. Hopi officials say she is one of 45 Hopis serving in the U.S. military.
Piestewa is shown with her 4-year-old son.
Historically, American Indians have enlisted in the U.S. military at higher rates than other groups. Defense Department officials say about 12,800 Indians are enlisted.
But as an Indian woman, Piestewa remains a statistical rarity.
Brenda Finnicum, a retired Army nurse and member of the Lumbee tribe, has researched the service of American Indian women in the military for five years and says many tell her they never met another Indian woman in the service.
"Indian women are what I call the invisible warrior. You don't see them," Finnicum said. But she said Indian women have fought in every American conflict for the last 200 years.
Piestewa's relatives say they aren't trying to draw attention to her.
"We are asking that you continue your prayers for all the brave men and women of the armed services and that you pray for their families as well," the family said in a statement.
They remains hopeful Piestewa, a mother of a 4-year-old boy and a 3-year-old girl, will return home safely with the rest of her company.
"We're just keeping the faith," said one of her brothers, Wayland Piestewa. "And sometimes no news is good news, so we're still hoping."
Also Online
Arizona family still hopeful that missing soldier is alive
Family says loved one still missing in Iraq
Tuba City soldier missing
War with Iraq
Meanwhile, the town is doing what it can, regularly delivering food to the Piestewas, and messages of support. Many cars sport yellow ribbons.
Just inside the entrance to the Bashas' Supermarket, a large photo of Piestewa in uniform is surrounded by yellow roses and other flowers. Green poster boards have been set up to allow the community to write messages to the family.
"A lot of the community members wanted to express their feelings, but not everybody can talk to the family right now," said market employee Reva Hoover.
Teacher Marjorie McCabe said the uncertainty about Piestewa's whereabouts is hard to bear.
"It's just waiting to hear something. I wish the military would find out and let the family know," she said. "They need to know something more definite. The waiting must be killing them."
Associated Press Writer Michelle Rushlo contributed to this story.
To: SlickWillard
Heartfelt condolences to families and friends of these fallen heroes. Their blood shall be avenged.
To: SlickWillard
Never give up! Never Surrender! Shoot until you run out of ammo, then charge with bayonets. If you run they will kill you and if you surrender it's the same. If it was me, I would rather go down fighting if there was no way to escape.
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 201-219 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson