Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All
Soldier loses rank for classified Internet posting

August 1, 2005

PHOENIX Putting classified information on his Internet blog has cost a National Guardsman in Iraq a demotion.

The Army says Leonard Clark of Glendale, Arizona, is a private first class once again. He was demoted from specialist, and fined more than 16-hundred dollars.

No word what classified information Clark put on his blog, but soldiers are forbidden from including anything about Army operations or movements.

Clark is a kindergarten teacher in civilian life. He decided not to appeal the ruling. His company is expected to return from Iraq next January.

2005 Associated Press

20 posted on 08/01/2005 8:32:45 PM PDT by Gucho
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies ]



U.S. Specialist Kevin Hill of the third battalion of the seventh infantry division patrols a street in Baghdad, Iraq, August 1, 2005. The head of the panel drawing up Iraq's new constitution announced on Monday that a draft would be ready by a mid-August deadline, as U.S. officials had hoped, easing fears divisions could set back the political process. (Photo by Andrea Comas/Reuters)


An unidentified U.S. soldier from the third battalion of the seventh infantry division enters a store to buy some candy during a patrol in Baghdad, Iraq, August 1, 2005. (REUTERS/Andrea Comas)


An unidentified U.S. soldier from the third battalion of the seventh infantry division patrols past two Iraqi boys in Baghdad, Iraq, August 1, 2005. The head of the panel drawing up Iraq's new constitution announced on Monday that a draft would be ready by a mid-August deadline, as U.S. officials had hoped, easing fears divisions could set back the political process. (REUTERS/Andrea Comas)

21 posted on 08/01/2005 8:44:41 PM PDT by Gucho
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies ]

To: All
Suspected Sayyaf bomber arrested in Zambo

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

By Al Jacinto

SECURITY forces stormed an Abu Sayyaf hideout and wounded and captured a wanted militant leader, tagged as behind the series of bombings in the southern Philippines, officials said Monday, Aug. 1.

Officials said troops captured Amilhamja Ajijul alias "Alex Alvarez" after a brief firefight late Sunday in the village of Recodo, west of the city. "His capture is a big blow to the Abu Sayyaf. We will not allow terror to reign," the commander of the Army's 1st Infantry Division Major General Gabriel Habacon said.

Ajijul was tagged as among those who staged the spate of bombings in Zamboanga City on October 2002 that left 11 killed, including a visiting US soldier, and wounded scores of civilians, he said.

Habacon said the military pieced together intelligence information about Ajijul and until he was tracked down in his hideout in Zamboanga City. "The war on terror continues and security forces are still pursuing other Abu Sayyaf members," he said.

Other reports said troops seized a fragmentation grenade in Ajijul's hideout. The military said Ajijul is a sub-leader of the Abu Sayyaf's urban terrorist group, blamed for the bombings of several shopping malls and a Catholic shrine in Zamboanga City in 2002.

He was also linked to the kidnapping of a US citizen Jefrrey Craig Schilling in 2000 and dozens of mostly students and teachers in Basilan island.

Security officials on Sunday linked the Abu Sayyaf group tied to al-Qaeda terror network to two bombings in the southern Philippines that left four people wounded.

"We have reasons to believe the Abu Sayyaf is behind these attacks. There is an ongoing operation against the terror group and the blasts could be diversionary," the commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division Maj. Gen. Agustin Dema-ala said.

Police and military said four people were wounded in separate explosions Saturday in the southern Philippines. A 14-year-old student of Notre Dame school was wounded when a home-made bomb exploded in Cotabato City before noon time. It said the bomb was planted near the administrative building of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

A second bomb explosion, which occurred four hours later in Koronadal City, left three civilians wounded. The bomb, placed in a cardboard box, exploded on a motorcycle taxi parked in front of the city's main market, the military said.

Police in Cotabato said it recovered parts of a shattered cellular phone, raising suspicion that it was used to trigger the explosion. "They're using cell phones as initiators to set off explosive devices. This could be part of a bigger plot to sow terror. We are in heightened alert now," said Police Inspector Joey Ampong.

Security forces were pursuing a faction of the Abu Sayyaf in Maguindanao province and troops had already killed six of them since last month.

Abu Sayyaf terrorists tied to al-Qaeda network had also previously used cell phones to detonate bombs in Zamboanga City. Instead of the phone ringing, it sends the power to an explosive charge and detonated it. In the Bali bombings in October 2002 that killed 202 people, Jemaah Islamiyah terrorists triggered a bomb in a mini-bus outside the Sari Club with a cell-phone detonator. A car bomb detonated by mobile phone killed 12 people at Jakarta's Marriott hotel in August 2003.

Washington listed the Abu Sayyaf as a foreign terrorist organization after Manila implicated five of the group's known leaders to the killing of Californian Guillermo Sobero in June 2001 and Kansas missionary Martin Burnham in 2002. They were kidnapped in Dos Palmas resort in the central Philippine province of Palawan in May 2001.

The United States has offered up to five million dollars (P280 million) and Manila put up a one hundred million pesos bounty for the capture of Abu Sayyaf chieftain Khadaffy Janjalani and other senior militant leaders. The group was also behind the kidnapping of 21 mostly Asian and European holiday-goers from the Malaysian island resort of Sipadan in April 2000. Many of the hostages later were freed after Libyan and Malaysian negotiators paid an estimated $11 million ransom.

22 posted on 08/01/2005 8:56:37 PM PDT by Gucho
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson