900th GI dies since war began in Iraq (Agencies) Updated: 2004-07-21 15:53
Militants freed a Filipino truck driver Tuesday after the Philippines
government gave in to their demands to withdraw troops from Iraq to prevent the
beheading of the 46-year-old father of eight who had been held captive for two
weeks.
On Wednesday, a 1st Infantry Division soldier became the 900th U.S. military
death in Iraq since the beginning of the war in March 2003. The soldier was
killed by a roadside bomb while on patrol in a Bradley fighting vehicle in
Duluiyah, 45 miles north of Baghdad.
 U.S. President
George W. Bush wipes his head while speaking in the heat at an "Ask
President Bush" campaign event while visiting the Kirkwood Community
College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, July 20,
2004.[Reuters] | Two Marines had been killed in separate incidents Tuesday while conducting
"security and stability operations." One soldier was killed Monday, and a second
died Monday of wounds. Before the five deaths, the Pentagon's official count of
the dead had stood at 895.
Apparently emboldened by their success getting the Philippines to withdraw,
insurgents promptly took aim at Japan, threatening in a Web site message to send
"lines of cars laden with explosives" to kill its troops in Iraq if they did not
leave. Japan rejected the demand.
More than 60 foreigners have been taken hostage in recent months, and there
were fears that the action by the Philippines government would lead to more
kidnappings and prompt members of the U.S.-led coalition to think twice about
sending, or keeping, their soldiers in Iraq.
"The Filipino withdrawal tells the insurgents that they can continue to chip
away at this coalition and make it a coalition of two (Britain and the United
States)," said Richard Shultz, a professor of security studies at Tufts
University.
In Baghdad, Filipino hostage Angelo dela Cruz was dropped off in front of the
United Arab Emirates Embassy on Tuesday, a day after his government withdrew the
last of the 51 troops they had stationed here.
"Angelo has become a Filipino 'everyman,' a symbol of the hardworking
Filipino seeking hope and opportunity," Philippines President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo said during a nationally televised address. "Angelo was spared, and we
rejoice," she said with a smile.
With more than 7 million Filipinos working overseas - 1.4 million of them in
the Middle East - many people in the Philippines developed a personal connection
to dela Cruz since he was first shown in a video aired July 7 surrounded by
masked gunmen who kidnapped him near the city of Fallujah. That connection put
intense pressure on Arroyo to secure his freedom.
Dela Cruz's family, and much of the Philippines, cheered his release.
His wife, Arsenia, burst into tears in neighboring Jordan, where she had been
awaiting word of him.
Safely inside the Philippines Embassy in Baghdad, dela Cruz enjoyed beer with
friends, including a fellow Filipino driver, around a table covered with plates
of salad, rice and traditional Iraqi chicken.
Dela Cruz said his captors treated him well, and he thanked Arroyo for
pulling out the troops. "I know that the Filipinos are all very happy about the
decision of the president," he said.
The United States and Iraq have criticized the pullout, saying it would
endanger others here.
"All of us know that if you appease terrorism, you will sooner or later fall
victim to it or be taken over by it," Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. military
commander in the Middle East, said during a visit to Bahrain.
Thousands of foreigners work in Iraq, for U.S. forces, in reconstruction
efforts or as drivers hauling fuel and cargo for private companies.
Of those kidnapped in recent months, some escaped, many were released and at
least three were beheaded in gruesome videos designed to spread fear.
A fourth video released last week showed a man, identified as Bulgarian truck
driver Georgi Lazov, kneeling before armed men from the Tawhid and Jihad group
of Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The Al-Jazeera television station,
which declined to show the rest of the video, said it depicted his killing.
The group had threatened to kill Lazov and fellow Bulgarian Ivailo Kepov if
the U.S. military did not release Iraqi detainees. Kepov's fate remains unknown.
Bulgaria - with a 480-member infantry battalion here - refused to withdraw,
though it did urge Bulgarian truck drivers to stop making trips into Iraq.
Bulgarian Foreign Minister Solomon Pasi suggested Monday that all countries
adopt a common "code of behavior" for such hostage crises. "In these cases,
cooperation is crucial," he said.
The kidnappings could cause problems for many governments, including
Bulgaria, that sent troops here over the strong opposition of their citizens.
Spain withdrew troops after a Socialist election victory following a
terrorist attack in Madrid. South Korea also faced pressure to cancel plans to
send 3,000 troops here when one of its citizens, Kim Sun-il, a 33-year-old
translator, was kidnapped and beheaded by militants.
Soon after dela Cruz's release, his kidnappers - the Khaled bin al-Waleed
Corps - took aim at Japan, demanding it pull out 500 troops sent here for
medical and reconstruction duty. Japan refused in April to withdraw after three
Japanese were kidnapped by Iraqi insurgents. They were released unharmed.
"To the government of Japan: Do what the Philippines has done. By God, nobody
will protect you and we are not going to tolerate anybody," said the group,
which is the military wing of Tawhid and Jihad. "Lines of cars laden with
explosives are awaiting you; we will not stop, God willing."
A Foreign Ministry official in Japan said Wednesday that Tokyo would not pull
its troops from Iraq.
"Japan is in Iraq on a humanitarian mission," the official said on condition
of anonymity. "The Iraqi people and government are grateful for its efforts."
The insurgents' Web statement also told Arab and Islamic governments not to
send troops.
"We are warning you for the last time: We will hit with an iron fist all
those supporting the Americans or (interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad) Allawi or
his cronies."
Allawi had asked some Muslim countries to contribute troops, but so far none
has come forward. Violence is a likely factor. Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi said he would not even send a planned medical team until "the
situation is a little more stable."
Iraq's fledgling interim government relies heavily on the 160,000 coalition
troops to fight the 15-month-old insurgency, which has used car bombings,
assassinations, sabotage and other violence to try to create chaos and drive out
foreign forces.
Violence continued Tuesday, with a roadside bomb attack on a vehicle near the
city of Baqouba, north of Baghdad, killed four civilians and wounded two others,
said Emad Kamil Rahim, a local hospital official.
Also, in the southern city of Basra, gunmen killed Hazim al-Aynachi, a
gubernatorial candidate, and his bodyguard and driver as they were leaving his
driveway for work Tuesday morning, council head Abdul Bari Faiyek said.
In Samarra, a hotbed of violence 60 miles north of Baghdad, U.S. forces and
militants engaged in running gunbattles, the U.S. military said. Four Iraqis
were killed and five were wounded, said Ahmed Jaddo, a hospital official. The
military said U.S. soldiers returned fire at insurgents and destroyed the house
they were in, while a U.S. warplane flattened another house with a 500-pound
bomb.
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