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NEW REPORTS SAY IRAQ HOLDING U.S. PILOT

Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

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       The Defense Department recently obtained additional intelligence stating 
that a missing Navy pilot is alive and being held by the Iraqi government, according 
to U.S. officials. 
     The intelligence officials believe that the reports refer to Navy Capt. 
Michael Scott Speicher, whose status was changed to "missing/captured" by the Navy in 
October. 
     The reports, received in November, state that Iraq is holding a U.S. pilot 
and has moved the pilot among 18 locations in the country, according to officials 
familiar with the documents. The reports said the pilot was being treated by a doctor. 
     The officials could not say how reliable the reports are or whether they 
represent "circular reporting" — new reports based on old intelligence information 
from the same source or similar sources. 
     A spokesman of the Defense Intelligence Agency said that it receives such 
dispatches several times a year. 
     "We investigate every single one," the spokesman said, without providing 
details. 
     Cindy Laquidara, a Florida lawyer who represents Capt. Speicher's family, 
said in an interview that she recently spoke to an Iraqi defector who reported seeing 
a captive U.S. pilot in Iraq. 
     The defector is one of at least three Iraqis who reported that Baghdad is 
holding an American pilot from the 1991 Persian Gulf war. 
     Mrs. Laquidara said she believes the recent reports are based on the 
defector's statements. 
     The intelligence officials said the latest information bolsters earlier 
reports indicating that Iraq has been holding an American pilot since the war. 
     Disclosure of the additional information on the pilot comes as the U.S. 
military continues to send thousands of troops to the Middle East as part of a buildup 
of forces for any operation against Iraq. 
     The prisoner-of-war case has complicated the Bush administration's effort to 
use the threat of military force to pressure Baghdad into disarming its chemical, 
biological and nuclear weapons. 
     The officials said any U.S. military action against Iraq is likely to be 
preceded by covert operations to find and rescue Capt. Speicher inside Iraq, if he is 
still alive. 
     There also are concerns among some Pentagon officials that Saddam Hussein 
might try to exploit the issue of the missing pilot in a standoff with the United 
States. Iraq might reveal that it has the pilot and then threaten to execute him if 
U.S. forces invade. 
     Mrs. Laquidara said she had contacted Iraq's ambassador to the United 
Nations about Capt. Speicher late last year and was told that Baghdad is willing to 
make a "humanitarian gesture," which she interpreted as meaning that Iraq may turn 
over the pilot or his remains. 
     "The Iraqis expressed a willingness to help me get answers to what happened, 
and where he or his remains are," Mrs. Laquidara said. "They did not admit that they 
have him, only that they would help.  
     "We feel that there is an urgent need to resolve the case" before any 
conflict erupts, she said. 
     Sen. Pat Roberts, Kansas Republican and incoming chairman of the Senate 
Select Committee on Intelligence, said in an interview that he has been pressing the 
Bush administration to resolve the Speicher case, as preparations for war are under 
way. 
     Information obtained recently from congressional staff visits to the region 
indicate that "more and more there are signs that an American POW is in Iraq," Mr. 
Roberts said. 
     He said that with Iraq facing attack, Saddam may be more willing to help 
resolve the case. 
     "I think we have a window of opportunity now, and we should do everything we 
can to use that" to find out about Capt. Speicher, Mr. Roberts said. 
     He sent a letter to Saddam on Monday appealing for Baghdad's help. 
     Sen. Bill Nelson, Florida Democrat, told reporters last month that a 
conflict with Iraq will make it more difficult to resolve the fate of Capt. Speicher. 
     "The clock is ticking," Mr. Nelson told the Jacksonville, Fla., Times-Union. 
"Once the balloon goes up in a hot war, it's going to be a lot more difficult to get 
information. For the Defense Department to keep dragging their feet, as they have in 
the past, that time is over." 
     Baghdad said last year that Capt. Speicher was dead and invited the U.S. 
government to send a team of investigators to look for him. 
     The Bush administration balked. The State Department and Pentagon chose, 
instead, to send a diplomatic note seeking more information. 
     In October, the Navy changed the status of Capt. Speicher to "missing in 
action, captured." It was the second time since 2001 that the Navy changed the downed 
pilot's status. He was initially declared killed in action after the F-18 jet he was 
flying was shot down over Iraq in January 1991. That was later changed to "missing in 
action" in 2001 and finally "missing/captured." 
     The status changes followed an investigation revealing that Capt. Speicher 
survived the F-18 downing by ejecting and numerous intelligence reports indicating 
that Iraq was holding a pilot from the Gulf war. 
     Navy Secretary Gordon England stated in a memorandum issued Oct. 11 that the 
status change does not mean Capt. Speicher's location is known. He said that if the 
Iraqis are holding Capt. Speicher, "he is entitled to prisoner-of-war status under the 
Geneva Convention and would have been entitled to that status from the first day he 
came under Iraqi control." He also said that if Capt. Speicher is alive, "he is a 
prisoner of war." 
     President Bush said in a speech in September to the United Nations that Iraq 
had failed to account for missing prisoners, including a pilot. 
     Mr. Bush signed legislation into law in October aimed at helping to resolve 
Capt. Speicher's case. 
     The Persian Gulf War POW/MIA Accountability Act amended earlier law on 
missing military personnel. 
     The new legislation gives the attorney general the power to grant refugee 
status to any Iraqi or Middle East national who "personally delivers into the custody 
of the United States government a living American Persian Gulf War POW/MIA."

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This article was mailed from The Washington Times 
(http://www.washtimes.com/national/20030110-48937660.htm)
For more great articles, visit us at http://www.washtimes.com

Copyright (c) 2002 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.


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