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U.S. Soldier Kidnapped in Iraqi City

conjur

No Lifer
http://www.reuters.com/newsArt...ws&storyID=6687453
SAMARRA, Iraq (Reuters) - Insurgents have captured an American soldier in the city of Samarra, north of Baghdad, an Iraqi police spokesman said Tuesday.
Lt. Col. Mohammed Ahmed of Samarra police told reporters the soldier had been seized Monday night by gunmen in two Opel cars. He said U.S. troops were out in force in the streets of the Sunni Muslim city Tuesday.

U.S. military officials could not immediately be reached for comment.


🙁
 
another needless death because our turd of a president rushed to war and then did it on the cheap. #@%!%#
 
http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsP...13103&section=news
An Iraqi cameraman working for Reuters has been killed during fierce clashes between U.S. forces and rebels in the western city of Ramadi, colleagues say.

Dhia Najim, 55, was covering fighting near his house in the Sunni Muslim city's Andalus district on Monday when he was shot in the head.

There was no immediate comment from the U.S. military.


Damn!


🙁




Heck...there are reports of car bombs in Baghdad and Mosul and attacks on the north flows of the Iraqi oil pipeline.
 
rose.gif
- I pray he's OK.

A good female friend of mine, an undercover military investigator, is headed over to Baghdad for 6 months. My heart will be broken if something awful happens to her there.
 
Update on the cameraman killed:

Reuters disputes US version of cameraman's death
http://media.guardian.co.uk/si...,14173,1341711,00.html
News agency Reuters today demanded a full investigation into the shooting of one of its cameramen in Iraq, after rejecting the US military's explanation of the incident.
The Reuters global managing editor, David Schlesinger, dismissed American claims that Dhia Najim was killed yesterday during a gunfight between marines and insurgents in the city of Ramadi.

Mr Schlesinger said video footage taken just before Mr Najim died showed that the fighting in Ramadi, which the cameraman had been filming earlier in the day, had subsided.

"We reject the clear implication in the marines' statement that Dhia was part of an insurgent group," he said.

"This claim is not supported by the available evidence. I strongly urge the US military to conduct a proper investigation into this tragic event."

In their first comment on the incident, US military officials today insisted Mr Najim was killed during a gunfight between US marines and Iraqi insurgents.


"Marines from the 1st Marine Division of the 1 Marine Expeditionary Force engaged several insurgents in a brief small arms firefight that killed an individual who was carrying a video camera earlier Monday morning," a statement from the army said.

The International Federation of Journalists condemned the killing, which came just hours after a bomb attack on the Baghdad office of an Arabic television station killed seven people.

"Journalists and media staff are victims of unprecedented levels of brutality. We need more action to reduce risks and we need clear answers to hard questions about why our colleagues are being killed," said Aidan White, the IFJ general secretary .

"We need to be certain that journalists are not the victims of reckless behaviour or poor soldiering that can and should be avoided."

Mr Najim was killed by a bullet in the neck near his house in Ramadi's Andalus district.

His family and colleagues alleged that he was shot by a US marine sniper, which news photographs taken on Sunday confirm were posted in the area.

Video shot from an upper floor of a nearby building shows Mr Najim was shot after moving into the open from behind a half-covered wall.

The cameraman, who leaves a wife, three daughters and a son, is the 62nd journalist to be killed in Iraq since the start of the war in March 2003, according to the IFJ.


Pentagon covering its ass?
 
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