|
BAGHDAD, March Al-Jazeera TV on Sunday, March
23, broadcast images of several dead bodies of U.S.
soldiers killed in Iraq, along with five others captured,
including two wounded, one of them a woman.
[Pictures
of captured U.S. soldiers taken from the footage aired
by the Iraqi TV]
The bodies shown were wearing bloodstained camouflage
uniforms and some appeared to have bullet wounds to
the head.
Three of the captured soldiers said they were from
Texas, including the woman who identified herself as
Shauna, aged 30, and one, a sergeant who identified
himself as James Reilly, from New Jersey.
Both were from the 507th Maintenance Company.
The Arabic language television network said the soldiers
were captured on the outskirts of Nasiriyah in central
Iraq.
Peter C. Miller of Kansas was asked in English why
he had come to fight the Iraqi people, with Iraqi television
microphones in front of him.
"I didn't come here to kill anyone. I was told
to shoot only if shot at," he said.
A soldier who gave his first name as Joseph and said
he was from Texas told the journalists: "I follow
orders."
Asked repeatedly if the Iraqi people he encountered
greeted him with flowers or guns he replied: "I
don't understand."
Another soldier named Edgar from Texas had a facial
wound and said through an interpreter that he had arrived
in Iraq from Kuwait.
Asked in Washington to comment on the videotape, U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld allowed that a small
number of U.S. troops were missing and may have been
captured by Iraq but said the tape was nothing but Iraqi
propaganda.
"It seems to me that showing a few pictures on
the screen, not knowing who they are and being communicated
by Al-Jazeera, which is not a perfect instrument of
communication, obviously is part of Iraqi propaganda,"
he told CBS television's "Face the Nation"
program.
A grim-faced Rumsfeld said that the video would be
a violation of international rules of war as laid out
in the Geneva Conventions, a sentiment echoed by General
Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
"This is just one more crime by the Iraqi regime,"
CNN quoted Myers as saying to reporters in a Pentagon
corridor.
The Pentagon confirmed that about 10 U.S. soldiers
reported missing in southern Iraq have been taken prisoner
and has begun notifying their families, CNN reported.
The all-news network said the families had begun to
be notified shortly after the videotape of interviews
with men and women who appeared to be captured U.S.
soldiers was broadcast.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon said that a plane reported
missing by Rumsfeld on Sunday was a British Tornado
accidentally hit by a U.S. missile and did not refer
to speculation that a plane had been shot down over
Baghdad.
Iraqi troops searched the sides of the Tigris River
in Baghdad on Sunday amid reports that a U.S. or British
plane had been shot down.
General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, said on one U.S. television channel that all
U.S. and British planes had been accounted for.
But speaking on a different network, Rumsfeld said
later "there has been a report that an aircraft
that is missing." But he would not comment on images
of Iraqi troops searching in Baghdad.
Colonel Catherine Abbott, a Pentagon spokeswoman, said
Rumsfeld was referring to the British Tornado that was
mistakenly shot down over the Gulf by a U.S. Patriot
missile.
She said no other coalition aircraft have been reported
missing.
A report on Al-Jazeera television said two men had
been captured, but they were not immediately seen on
the screen.
|