The May 2007 abduction of US soldiers in Iraq occurred when Iraqi insurgents attacked a military outpost in Qarghouli, west of Yusufiyah and south of Baghdad, killing four US soldiers and an Iraqi Soldier before capturing Spc. Alex Ramon Jimenez, Pfc. Joseph John Anzack and Pvt. Byron Wayne Fouty on May 12, 2007. A 4th soldier; Sgt. Anthony J. Schober, was thought to have also been captured, but his remains were identified later[3]
Contents |
Two HMMWVs, each carrying four soldiers, were sitting on a road along the Euphrates River several miles west of Mahmudiyah when the insurgents, who had been observing them for two nights, attacked. They fired guns and hurled grenades into the vehicles, killing the four Americans and an Iraqi soldier; they then set the vehicles on fire with extra fuel and took the three captured soldiers with them.[4]
The names of the 4 US soldiers were killed in the incident are listed:
At the time, the capture represented the second-largest capture of US soldiers in the war, the worst since the March 23, 2003 capture of Jessica Lynch and five other soldiers.
A $200,000 reward was offered for information on the whereabouts of the soldiers, all of whom belonged to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division based in northern New York.[5] On May 17, New Iraqi Army forces detained 16 people described as "suspects" in the incident.[6]
On May 19 US forces stormed a facility in Al-A'amiriya and detained nine occupants, on a tip that they were related to the capture. It was announced that afternoon that one of the three soldiers was believed killed a few days after capture, while the other two remained prisoners.[5] The same day, a search party for the missing soldiers came under attack, leaving one American soldier dead and four more wounded.[7]
According to an Iraqi intelligence officer, two prisoners confessed to taking part in the attack, saying that a group of thirteen insurgents had attacked the outpost, and split into two group afterwards, with the ringleader taking the captured US soldiers with him.[8] The Iraqi Army arrested more than 250 people suspected of ties to the attack.[9]
On May 20, US forces drained a canal along the Euphrates after local villagers reported seeing body parts floating, but had no success.[9] On May 21, another 14 people were arrested within a 9-mile radius of the original site of the kidnapping. Four others were detained and then released, in Jurf al-Sakhr, after two US Stryker companies entered the city to question rumoured relatives of the attackers.[9] On May 23, military officials informed the family of Joseph Anzack that a commanding officer had visually identified his body as being one pulled from the Euphrates River by Iraqi patrol boats, although DNA tests were still pending.[10] The body had two bullet holes in the head and one in the chest.
On June 4, The Islamic State of Iraq declared in a video posted on the internet than Byron and Alex were killed because the U.S refused to stop searching for them. They also claimed that they would not give the bodies of the two soldiers to their families and that the two men were buried.[11]
On January 8, 2008, Jimenez was promoted to Sergeant. Soldiers who are missing in action are considered in service until known otherwise, and are promoted depending on their level of education and training in the armed forces.[12]
On Wednesday July 9, 2008,[13] the bodies of the Alex Jimenez and Byron Fouty were found in an area south of Baghdad known as the "triangle of death".[14] The Defense Department released a statement to the public on July 11, 2008.[15]
The Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility for capturing the three soldiers on May 14, stating that the attack was another reprisal for the Mahmudiyah incident in which 14-year old Abeer Qassim Hamza was gangraped by US soldiers before being murdered along with her family. The group issued a statement, saying "What you are doing in searching for your soldiers will lead to nothing but exhaustion and headaches. Your soldiers are in our hands. If you want their safety, do not look for them[16][5]
On March 22, 2009, the US Army filed a complaint against 12 Islamic State of Iraq members suspected of taking part in the ambush. All were in custody.[17]
In July 2008, someone claiming to be Mick Fouty, Byron's biological father, posted a fake ad on Craigslist about wanting to sell his son's car, a BMW, for a fraction of its Blue Book value. In real life, Byron Fouty never owned his own car. Members of Jimenez's family noticed the ad and notified Fouty's family. A criminal investigation is underway to uncover the perpetrator and find out if anyone became a victim of the fraud.