virus: Very sad

From: Walter Watts (wlwatts@cox.net)
Date: Fri Mar 12 2004 - 18:45:01 MST

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    One of those killed below was a woman named Fern Holland, 33, a human
    rights expert from Oklahoma who worked on women’s issues in the Hillah
    region.

    Very sad.
    --------------------------------------------------------------

    Iraqi police suspected of killing 2 U.S. officials

    Arrests heighten concerns over infiltration of new forces
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 6:07 p.m. ET March 12, 2004

    BAGHDAD, Iraq - Four Iraqis suspected of killing a pair of American
    officials and their translator appear to be active police officers
    working with a Saddam Hussein loyalist, a top U.S. military official
    said Friday, raising concerns that insurgents are infiltrating Iraqi
    security forces being trained by U.S. forces.

    The four were caught along with a former officer from the Saddam-era
    police forces and a civilian after the slayings Tuesday of the two
    U.S.-led coalition staffers and an Iraqi woman south of Baghdad, Maj.
    Gen. Mark Kimmitt said.

    U.S. troops have been setting up Iraqi police and other security forces,
    intending to gradually put them on the frontlines against guerrillas.

    Coalition spokesman Dan Senor called the policemen’s role in the attack
    “an exception” and defended what he called a “robust” process of vetting
    police recruits to try to uncover criminal pasts or links to Saddam’s
    regime. “But it is not perfect,” he said. “Individuals slip through the
    cracks. We act to identify it and remove them immediately.”

    FBI experts were investigating the attack that killed the three, amid
    conflicting reports over the shooting outside the town of Hillah. Polish
    troops patrolling the region said the police stopped the victims’ car at
    a checkpoint and shot them to death.

    Kimmitt, however, said the attackers may have been in a second car that
    ran the coalition staffers off the road.

    Roadside bomb kills 2 U.S. soldiers Meanwhile, the military announced
    Friday that two U.S. soldiers were killed and a third wounded when their
    Humvee struck a roadside bomb northeast of Habbiniyah in the Sunni
    Triangle, heartland of the anti-U.S. insurgency.

    The latest deaths bring to 556 the number of U.S. service members who
    have died since the United States launched the Iraq war in March. Most
    have died since President Bush declared an end to active combat May 1.

    The American civilians slain Tuesday with their translator were the
    first from the U.S. occupation authority to be killed in Iraq. One was
    Fern Holland, 33, a human rights expert from Oklahoma who worked on
    women’s issues in the Hillah region. The other was a regional press
    officer, Robert J. Zangas, 44, of suburban Pittsburgh.

    Kimmitt said four of the six men in custody, caught together in the same
    car soon after the attack, had current police identification.
    Investigators were examining whether they were authentic but “we believe
    they are valid,” he said.

    U.S. officials have trained more than 70,000 Iraqi police officers, as
    well as some 25,000 members of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps, or ICDC,
    in a matter of months. New recruits undergo an eight-week training
    program, while veteran officers have three weeks of training on new
    techniques and democratic principles, Senor said.

    Recruits are vetted, but records for criminal activity or past links to
    Saddam’s regime are scattered and difficult to track down.

    'Not a major problem' On Monday, U.S. troops arrested one current and
    two former ICDC soldiers for selling weapons to insurgents and carrying
    out bomb attacks on the homes of Iraqis cooperating with American forces
    in Tikrit, Saddam’s hometown north of Baghdad.

    Lt. Col. Steve Russell, a battalion commander in Tikrit, said
    infiltration is “not a major problem.”

    “In terms of the ICDC, this is where those that were not properly
    scrutinized may sometimes have their loyalties elsewhere. But these
    represent a very small number,” he said.

    Russell said information provided by ICDC officers led to the arrests,
    “proving that they don’t want a negative reputation” for their forces.

    As part of the recruiting process in Tikrit, Russell said he has local
    tribal leaders vouch for those wanting to join — and those who don’t get
    the sheik’s nod are turned down. The three ICDC members caught Monday
    were trained outside the area and would not have gone through that
    process, he said.

    Senor called Tuesday’s attack near Hillah, 35 miles south of Baghdad, a
    “targeted act of terrorism.” Kimmitt, however, said it was not yet clear
    if the attackers knew their targets were coalition officials.

    --
    Walter Watts
    Tulsa Network Solutions, Inc.
    "Pursue the small utopias... nature, music, friendship, love"
    --Kupferberg--
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