|
Iraq Militants Claim Marine
Beheading
By NADIA ABOU EL-MAGD, Associated Press Writer
Baghdad -
An Iraqi militant group claimed on a Web site Saturday it beheaded a
captive U.S. Marine, in what would be the fourth decapitation of a
foreign hostage in the region since May.
The group, called the Ansar al-Sunna
Army, posted a written statement on an Islamic Web site claiming that
it had killed Lebanese-born Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun, saying he had
been lured into a trap involving a love affair with an Arab woman.
Also Saturday, insurgents set off a
roadside bomb at an Iraqi checkpoint, killing seven national guardsmen
in the deadliest attack on Iraqi troops since the U.S. occupation
authorities transferred power to a new Iraqi government five days ago.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari
said his country was in "a race against time" in dealing with
insurgents. He said Iraqi troops "are not ready" to deal with the
challenges alone.
About 160,000 foreign troops, mostly
American, stayed after Monday's handover of sovereignty to the new
interim government. NATO leaders last week offered military training
to the new Iraqi government.
In recent days, Jordan, Bahrain and
Yemen have offered military help under certain conditions.
"These countries can support United
Nations operations and play a central and effective role,"
Zebari said.
The U.S. military in Baghdad said it
was checking into the report of the 24-year-old Hassoun's death but
had no confirmation.
It was not immediately possible to
verify the authenticity of the group's statement.
"We would like to inform you that the
Marine of Lebanese origin, Hassoun, has been slaughtered. You are
going to see the video with your very eyes soon," said the statement,
signed in the name of the group's leader, Abu Abdullah al-Hassan bin
Mahmoud.
It also said it had taken another
hostage but did not give details.
The group called itself the Ansar al-Sunna
Army in Qaim, a town on the Syrian border that has seen frequent
clashes between U.S. troops and militants. The message was dated June
20, the day the military said Hassoun, of West Jordan, Utah, was first
reported missing — though the posting was dated Saturday.
"We will show a new video of the
detention of a new infidel hostage and as recently promised, the
beheading of rotten heads," the statement said.
"Withdraw your army and you will be
safe. Or else we will keep doing what we are doing."
On June 27, the Arab television
station Al-Jazeera broadcast a videotape showing Hassoun blindfolded,
along with a statement from militants threatening to kill him unless
the United States released all Iraqis in "occupation jails."
In that initial statement, the
kidnappers identified themselves as "Islamic Response," the security
wing of the "National Islamic Resistance - 1920 Revolution Brigades,"
referring to the uprising against the British after World War I.
Saturday's claim on Hassoun's death
was issued on the same Islamic extremist Web forum where footage was
posted last month showing the beheading of U.S. engineer Paul M.
Johnson Jr., in Saudi Arabia. The site also often carries claims of
attacks by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian militant said to be
operating in Iraq .
Al-Zarqawi's movement claimed
responsibility for the beheading last month of Kim Sun-il, a South
Korean who worked for a company delivering supplies to American
forces, and Nicholas Berg, an American businessman, whose body was
found in Baghdad in May. Johnson's slaying was claimed by al-Qaida-linked
militants in Saudi Arabia, and pictures of his severed head were
posted on the Internet.
Another militant group in Iraq
claimed last week that it had killed Spc. Keith M. Maupin, of Batavia,
Ohio, an American soldier held captive since April. The military has
not yet confirmed that it was Maupin who was shown in grainy video
footage of a man being shot in the back of the head.
In Saturday's statement, the
militants said they used a woman to trap Hassoun.
"As your soldier had a love affair
with a young Arab woman, he has been lured from the base," the
statement said.
The U.S. military said Hassoun had
been absent without authorization since June 20, though after the
video was shown it changed his status to "captured."
The New York Times, citing a Marine
officer speaking on condition of anonymity, has reported that Hassoun
had been traumatized by seeing one of his sergeants killed by a
mortar, and was trying to make his way back to Lebanon. The officer
told the paper that Hassoun sought the help of Iraqis on the base, was
betrayed by them and handed over the extremists.
Hassoun's
eldest brother, Mohammad, who lives in a Salt Lake City suburb, denied
the report. The Marine's relatives were in seclusion at their Utah
home after the Web site posting Saturday.
Ansar
al-Sunna Army claimed responsibility for the twin suicide attacks on
the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party
offices in Irbil on Feb. 1 that killed 109 people.
Early Saturday, seven Iraqi national
guardsmen were killed by a roadside bomb at a checkpoint in Mahmudiyah,
20 miles south of Baghdad, U.S. officials said.
A U.S. Marine died Saturday of wounds
suffered Friday during operations in Anbar province, a Sunni-dominated
area west of Baghdad that has been a hotbed of resistance, the
military said. The U.S. military gave no details. The Marine was the
fourth to die this month in Anbar.
An Iraqi police officer was killed
Friday when insurgents attacked a checkpoint in the northern city of
Mosul, the U.S. military said in a statement Saturday.
A senior U.S. military official said
it would take years for Iraqi forces to grow strong enough to take
back responsibility for security in their country.
The official, who spoke on condition
of anonymity, said he was "unable to find a place where we've gone to
total local control."
Iraqi officials have said they are
considering implementing emergency measures — possibly martial law —
in some areas to help restore security. The U.S. official said the
military was looking at ways to assist.
Meanwhile, U.S. forces in Baghdad
said they uncovered a bomb-making facility and several weapons caches,
and detained dozens of people believed linked to an insurgent cell
accused of planting roadside bombs.
Soldiers from the 1st Cavalry
Division found several assembled bombs, four vehicles they believed
were to be rigged as car bombs, automatic weapons, ammunition,
explosives and about $8,750, the military said. -- AP
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|