US troops on Saturday searched for two soldiers missing after an attack that
killed one of their comrades at a checkpoint in the so-called "Triangle of
Death" south of Baghdad.
In this
still from video footage released by the US Army, Maj. Gen. William B.
Caldwell speaks during a press conference in Baghdad Iraq, Saturday, June
17, 2006. The US military said troops searched Saturday for two soldiers
that went missing after an attack that killed one of their comrades at a
traffic checkpoint in the so-called 'Triangle of Death' just south of
Baghdad. [AP] |
US Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said four raids had been carried out since
Friday's attack and that ground forces, helicopters and airplanes were taking
part in the search.
He said a dive team also was going to search for the men, whose checkpoint
was located by a Euphrates River canal near Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of
Baghdad.
The New York Times reported that Iraqi residents in the area said they saw
two soldiers taken prisoner by a group of masked guerrillas. It said the two
surviving soldiers were led to two cars and driven away.
Fellow soldiers at a nearby checkpoint heard small-arms fire and explosions,
and a quick-reaction force reached the scene in 15 minutes, the military said.
The force found one soldier dead but no sign of the two others.
"We are currently using every means at our disposal on the ground, in the air
and in the water to find them," said Caldwell, the spokesman for US forces in
Baghdad.
The area is known as the Triangle of Death because of the frequent ambushes
and attacks against US soldiers and Iraqi troops.
The spokesman noted the military was still searching for Sgt. Keith Matthew
Maupin, who went missing on April 9, 2004.
"We continue to search using every means available and will not stop looking
until we find the missing soldiers," he said.
Maupin was captured when insurgents ambushed his fuel convoy with the 724th
Transportation Co. west of Baghdad. A week later, Arab television network
Al-Jazeera aired a videotape showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by
five masked men holding automatic rifles.
That June, Al-Jazeera aired another tape purporting to show a US soldier
being shot. But the dark, grainy tape showed only the back of the victim's head
and did not show the actual shooting. The Army ruled it was inconclusive whether
the soldier was Maupin.
A 20-year-old private first class at the time of his capture, Maupin has been
promoted twice since then.