WAR U.S. soldiers taken prisoner, interrogated The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 24, 2003 - 6A I The interrogation of five U.S. soldiers - four men and a woman - was broadcast on Iraqi TV DOHA, Qatar (AP) - Looking by turns frightened or stoical, five captured U.S. soldiers were thrust in front of an Iraqi TV microphone and peppered with questions yesterday. The footage also showed at least four bodies. U.S. officials confirmed that 12 soldiers and at least one aircraft were missing in southern Iraq, and said the troops may have been lured into a trap by Iraqi soldiers pretending to surrender. The scenes of interrogators questioning four men and a woman were broadcast by the Arab satellite sta- tion Al-Jazeera with footage from state-controlled Iraqi television. Each was interviewed individually. They spoke into a microphone labeled "Iraqi Television." A senior defense official said the Pentagon did not know precisely how many captives there might be, and declined to identify the unit involved so as not to panic soldiers' families. Some Iraqi soldiers acted as though they wanted to surrender, then opened fire, the official said. Al-Jazeera quoted unidentified Iraqi officials as say- ing the Iraqis are using a defensive tactic of falling back, allowing their enemy to overextend itself and become vulnerable to attack behind the lines. Speaking on CBS, Defense Secretary Donald Rums- feld charged that if those seen on television were indeed coalition soldiers, "those pictures are a violation of the Geneva Conventions." International Committee of the Red Cross spokes- woman Nada Doumani said the showing of the prison- ers on TV violates Article 13 of the Geneva Conven- tions, which says prisoners should be protected from public curiosity. But she stressed that the priority at the moment is to get access to them. "It does contradict the conventions because it's pub- lic curiosity" she said. "But our priority is not to put blame on any side but to check that the prisoners are safe. Let's put the focus on getting access and ensuring safety and then we can discuss in detail the provisions of the Geneva Conventions. The important thing is to have people treated in a humane way." Each prisoner shown on television spoke American- accented English. One was a 30-year-old woman from Texas. Her eyes darted back and forth and she held her arms tightly in her lap as she was questioned. At one point, the camera panned back, showing a big white bandage around her ankle. Her voice was very shaky. Another prisoner, who said he was from El Paso, Texas, stared directly at the camera and spoke in a clear direct voice, often shaking his head and cupping his ear slightly to indicate that he couldn't hear one of the questions being shot at him from around the room. A 31-year-old sergeant from New Jersey sat bolt upright in a chair with brown armrests. His hands in his lap, he answered questions in a clipped fashion and said he was with the 507th Maintenance Company. The woman also said she was from the 507th Maintenance. Both the Air Force and Army have companies with that designation. One of the men, sitting up, was interviewed by an unseen person holding a microphone labeled "Iraqi TV" in Arabic. The prisoner at one point said: "I'm sorry. I don't understand you." The narrator provided an Arabic translation, but it was possible to hear some of the comments in English. The prisoners looked terrified. One captive, who said he was from Kansas, answered all his questions in a shaky voice, his eyes darting back and forth between the interviewer and another person who couldn't be seen on camera. Asked why he came to Iraq, he replied, "I come to fix broke stuff" Prodded again by the interviewer, he was asked if he came to shoot Iraqis. "No, I come to shoot only if I am shot at," he said. "They (Iraqis) don't bother me, I don't bother them." Another prisoner, who said he was from Texas, said only: "I follow orders." A voice off-camera asked how many officers were in his unit. "I don't know, sir," the man replied. Another prisoner, who also said he was from Texas, was lying on an elaborate maroon mat. The camera panned from his feet to his head, showing one of his arms to be wounded and folded across his chest. Iraqi TV attempted to interview him, at one point trying to cradle his head to steady it for the camera. They eventually helped him sit up, but he seemed to sway slightly. The camera showed four bodies on the floor of the room. The station said they and the prisoners were cap- tured around An Nasiriyah, a major crossing point over the Euphrates northwest of Basra. U.S. officials said yesterday that U.S. Marines defeated Iraqi forces near An Nasiriyah in the sharpest engagement of the war. But Iraqi forces also ambushed an army supply convoy and 12 soldiers were missing, they said. Anecita Hudson wipes tears from her eyes as she talks about her son, Spc. Joseph Hudson, who she learned was captured by Iraqi forces. Little girl lost U.S. still searching for chemical weapons.- WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. spe- cial operations troops combing Iraq for Scud missiles and chemical or biological weapons have found none so far, a senior American military officer said Saturday. Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, vice director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Penta- gon news conference that the Iraqis have not fired any Scuds and that U.S. forces searching airfields in the far western desert of Iraq have uncovered no missiles or launchers. Iraq denies having any Scuds, which have sufficient range to reach Israel, but Gen. Tommy Franks, who is running the war, said Saturday that Iraq has yet to account for about two dozen Scuds that United Nations inspectors have said were left over from the 1991 Gulf War. Iraq also denies it holds any chemical or biological weapons. McChrystal said the United States will either bomb any such weapons it should find'or seize them with ground forces, whichever is safer. He and other officials refused to say where in Iraq those searches are happening. Also Saturday, the U.S. military abandoned plans to open a northern front against Iraq that would have sent heavy armored forces streaming across the Turkish border. Two U.S. defense officials said dozens of U.S. ships carrying weaponry for the Army's 4th Infantry Division will head to the Persian Gulf after weeks of waiting off Turkey's coast while the two countries tried to reach a deal. McChrystal said that even without the 4th Infantry, "there will be a northern option." He would not say what that might be. Other officials said Army air- borne troops might join small numbers of U.S. special operations forces already on the ground in northern Iraq, where American officials fear clashes between Turkish forces and Iraqi Kurds. Although U.S. officials on Friday said all 8,000 soldiers in Iraq's 51st Mechanized Division in southern Iraq has surrendered, McChrystal said Saturday that only the unit's commanders gave themselves up. The rest simply left the battlefield or were "melting away," he said. McChrystal said the number of Iraqi prisoners of war was between 1,000 and 2,000. In describing over- all progress in the war, McChrystal "We would be hopeful that those with triggers on these weapons understand what Secretary Don Rumsfeld said...yesterday. Don't use it. Don't use it. - Tommy Franks Gen., U.S. Central Command said American and British forces have hit Iraq with 500 cruise mis- siles and several hundred precision- guided bombs over the past day. The use of air-launched cruise missiles in Friday's attacks was the first since the war began. Warplanes flew 1,000 missions from aircraft carriers and air bases in the region, he said. Iraqi soldiers, "including some leadership," are surrendering and defecting in large numbers, Pentagon spokeswoman Torie Clarke said."It is only a matter of time before the Iraqi regime is destroyed and its threat to the region ... is ended," she said. Northern Iraq is an important battle- ground because of the Kurdish presence in enclaves not controlled by the Iraqi government. Turkey fears the Kurds will seize the northern oil fields or establish an independent state, thus complicating Turkey's conflict with its own Kurdish minority. The Pentagon wanted to put a heavy armored force into northern Iraq and had designated the 4th Infantry for that mission. The only feasible avenue for them to reach northern Iraq was from bases in Turkey, an option foreclosed by the Turkish government. With U.S. ground forces advanc- ing toward Baghdad, Pentagon offi- cials expressed concerns the troops might come across Republican Guard troops armed with chemical weapons. "We would be hopeful that those with their triggers on these weapons understand what Secretary Don Rumsfeld said in his comments yesterday: "Don't use it. Don't use it."' 9 9 AP PHOTO An Iraqi man carries a child reportedly injured near the southern Iraqi city of Basra Saturday. Patriot missile shoots down British jet, kills 2 I CAMP AS SAYLIYAH, Qatar (AP) - Coalition forces suffered their first confirmed "friendly fire" deaths of the Iraq war yesterday, when a U.S. Patriot missile battery downed a British fighter jet near the Iraqi-Kuwait border, killing the two fliers on board. Military analysts said the downing was rare, since the Royal Air Force Tornado GR4 would have been outfitted with a transponder - an electronic signal device identifying itself as a coalition military aircraft. The shootdown was a blow for Britain, which already suffered 14 dead in accidents: the crash Fri- day of a CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter that killed eight and a collision Saturday of two British Royal Navy helicopters that killed six. Five American servicemen were killed in those incidents as well. The Tornado was returning from operations in Iraq when it was targeted by a U.S. Patriot missile battery, the British military said. The Royal Air Force base at Marham, in Britain, con- firmed the two crewmembers were dead. Over Iraq, the fighter had been taking part in strikes that destroyed Republican Guard forces outside Bagh- dad, U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said in Qatar. "I have to say it is not the beginning that we would have preferred," Group Capt. Al Lockwood, spokesman for British forces in the Persian Gulf, said. But, he said, "this is not training, this is war. And we expect tragically, occasionally that there are accidents." In military parlance the phenomenon also is known as "blue on blue," or "fratricide" - the mistake that sends missiles, bullets, bombs or artillery shells hurtling in the wrong direction, inflicting casualties or damage on noncombatants or one's own forces. Every modern war has recorded its share of such incidents. In the 1991 Gulf War, the last time U. S. troops fought the Iraqis, 35 Americans were killed by friendly fire - nearly one quarter of the total of 148 combat deaths. In that war, too, several British troops were killed by errant U.S. fire. As warfare has become more reliant on precision- guided weapons, the likelihood of such incidents diminishes. But even if the technology were fool- proof - which it is not - the humans who use it remain vulnerable to mistakes. "There are so many layers of information on all the layers of the battlefield," said Michael Donovan, a research analyst with the Washing- ton-based Center for Defense Information. "Complex systems unfortunately tend to break down, you can count on it." The most famous recent example of precision tar- geting gone wrong occurred during the Persian Gulf "tanker war" between Iraq and Iran on July 3, 1988, when the Navy cruiser USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian A300 Airbus over the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 aboard. 0 0 c I AP PHOTO Two Royal Navy Sea King search and rescue helicopters, similar to the one seen In this 1995 file photo, collided over international waters In the Gulf Saturday. OSCARS Continued from Page 1A Actress-nominated Nicole Kidman, but most proved unfounded. In fact, only Will Smith actively stated his withdrawal from presenting last night due to the ongoing war. But Michael Moore criticized President Bush and the U.S.-led war in Iraq during his acceptance speech yesterday, receiving both a partial standing ovation and some jeers from Hollywood's elite. The documentary maker won his first Oscar for "Bowling for Columbine," but called up other nominees on stage to join him in a show of solidarity for non- fiction during these "fictitious times." "We live in the time where we have fictitious election results that elect a fictitious president," Moore said. "We live in a time where we have a man who's sending us to war for fictitious reasons, whether it's the fiction of duct tape or the fic- tion of orange alerts." Applause gave way to some boos, as the orchestra began playing to cue the filmmaker to leave the stage. "We are against this war, Mr. Bush. Shame on you, Mr. Bush. Shame on you;' Moore shouted. Some of the celebrities not in attendance due to various reasons included Cate Blanchett, Best Pic- ture nominated producer/director Peter Jackson, esteemed and contro- versial rapper-turned-actor Eminem and Best Supporting Actor nominee Paul Newman. In addition to the "glitz-free" opening of the ceremonies, the press was blacklisted from Vanity Fair's black-tie after-party at Holly- wood eatery Morton's. Some of the more extreme hearsay included a vicarious request from the White House to postpone the awards, which was immediately denied. "There have been more rumors flying around about the Academy Awards ... than there is flying around about what's happening in Iraq," Cates said. Even with the mass of security pre- cautions, possible terrorist concerns and the ongoing war, Pierson proclaimed that there was no real concern that the Oscars posed a legitimate target for a terrorist attack. As it has for 75 years and counting, the show did go on. Fifteen wounded in grenade attack in U.S. camp, American soldier found responsible KUWAIT CITY (AP) - A U.S. soldier most likely acted out of resentment yesterday when he threw grenades into tents at a 101st Airborne Division command center, killing a fellow serv- iceman, an Army spokesman said. Fifteen other soldiers, including the division commander, were wounded - at least three of them seriously - in an early attack yesterday at Camp Pennsylvania, the rear base for the 101st near the Iraqi border. The 101st is based at Fort Campbell, Ky. The dead soldier was identified yesterday as Army Capt. Christopher Scott Seifert, 27. No hometown was immediately available for Seifert, who was sleeping in his tent when the grenade attack occurred, the Defense Department said. The soldier in custody was identified yester- day as Sgt. Asan Akbar of the 326th Engineer Battalion. Fort Campbell spokesman George Heath said Akbar had not been charged with any crime. Heath did not release Akbar's hometown or say how long he had served in the military. But Heath did say Akbar had been "having what some might call an attitude problem." As a sergeant, Akbar commanded four to seven sol- diers, Heath said. Another Army spokesman, Max Blumenfeld, said the motive in the attack "most likely was 'We noticed four hand grenades were missing and that this sergeant was unaccounted for' - Col. Frederick Hodges Commander, 1st Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division cans still were investigating all locally contract- ed workers in the camp, such as cleaners, drivers and volunteer translators. Two Kuwaiti transla- tors also were questioned and released. "When this all happened we tried to get accountability for everybody," Col. Frederick Hodges, commander of the division's 1st Brigade, told Britain's Sky News television. "We noticed four hand grenades were missing and that this sergeant was unaccounted for." Akbar was found hiding in a bunker, said Hodges, who was slightly injured in the attack. "I immediately smelled smoke," the command- er told Sky News. "I heard a couple of explo- sions and then a popping sound which. I think was probably a rifle being fired. It looks like some assailant threw a grenade into each of these three tents here." One grenade went off in the command tent, Blumenfeld said. The tent, the tactical operations center runs 24 hours a dav and would alwvs he about the wounded. Heath said Akbar would be brought back to Fort Campbell "for judicial punishment" if he is found guilty. Army Lt. Gen. John Abizaid said at a briefing in Qatar that the grenade attack was "very tragic and very unfortunate," and "I don't think it's indicative of the morale of our forces." The 101st Airborne is a rapid deployment group trained to go anywhere in the world within 36 Ifours. The roughly 22,000 members of the 101st were deployed Feb. 6. The last time the entire division was deployed was during the 1991 Per- sian Gulf War, which began after Iraq invaded neighboring Kuwait. Most recently, the 101st hunted suspected Tal- iban and al-Qaida fighters in the mountains of Afghanistan. Its exploits are followed in Ken- tucky with much pride. Kuwait is the main launching nint for the Key win from last night's 75th Annual Academy Awards