-Caveat Lector-

This article from NYTimes.com
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Must be protective custody, because the U.S. would never threaten a man's family.  
That's a form of mental torture, isn't it?  Prudy

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U.S. Arrests Wife and Daughter of Hussein Aide

November 26, 2003
 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS





Filed at 8:32 a.m. ET

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- U.S. troops arrested the wife and
daughter of a top Saddam Hussein deputy suspected of
masterminding attacks on U.S. troops, and a major pipeline
linking northern Iraqi oilfields to the country's biggest
refinery was ablaze Wednesday.

Hours after large explosions shook the center of Baghdad
near U.S. headquarters, the visiting British foreign
secretary said Iraq will be a safer place once the U.S.-
and British-led coalition hands over power to an Iraqi
government.

Troops of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division in Samarra, 70
miles north of Baghdad, arrested the wife and daughter of
Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, a top Saddam associate, division
spokesman Lt. Col. William MacDonald said Wednesday.

Under Saddam, al-Douri was vice chairman of the ruling
Revolutionary Command Council, and shortly before the war
began March 20, Saddam placed him in charge of defenses in
northern Iraq.

U.S. officials have said they believe al-Douri has planned
some of the attacks against U.S. forces, and last week
offered a $10 million reward for information leading to his
capture. Al-Douri is No. 6 on the list of 55 most-wanted
Iraqis.

MacDonald said a man he identified as the son of a
physician was also taken into custody in the raid Tuesday.
He had no further information about the man.

In London, the former chief of Iraq's interim
administration, retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, said in an
interview broadcast Wednesday on British Broadcasting Corp.
radio that the U.S.-led coalition made mistakes after it
took control of Baghdad.

Garner, who was replaced by L. Paul Bremer after less than
a month in the job, said he could have done better at
communicating with the Iraqi people. He also said the
coalition should have moved more quickly to establish a
government in Iraq and put more troops in Baghdad,
including more infantry.

``If we did it over again, we probably would have put more
dismounted infantrymen in Baghdad and maybe more troops
there,'' Garner said, when asked what the biggest mistakes
of the occupation had been.

Witnesses near the village of Sharqat, 170 miles north of
Baghdad, said sheets of flame and thick black smoke were
shooting from the damaged pipeline, only 30 miles from
Iraq's largest oil refinery.

There was no immediate explanation for the cause of the
blaze, but guerrillas have repeatedly attacked pipelines in
the general area. The attacks have complicated efforts to
revive Iraq's giant petroleum industry, the key to its
economic recovery.

Iraq has the second-largest proven petroleum reserves in
OPEC. But many companies are holding back until they see an
improvement in security against attacks by militants
opposed to American troops and the U.S.-backed Iraqi
Governing Council.

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, on a two-day visit to
Iraq, said a political transition to Iraqi rule will
improve the security situation. More than five dozen U.S.
troops have been killed by hostile fire in November, more
than any other month since the official end of major combat
in Iraq on May 1.

``I'm absolutely sure that a more rapid political process
will assist the security situation,'' Straw said at a news
conference.

``The more that we can give all Iraqis a stake in their
future and a stable political architecture in which to
work, the more I believe more Iraqis will become committed
to that future and fewer will think that terror and
quiescence in terror is the way forward.''

Straw said he met with members of the coalition-appointed
Iraqi Governing Council to discuss the political process,
in which the council is to hand over power to a new,
transitional government by June 30.

``Iraq is a better place and will become a far better place
as a result of that transition,'' he said. ``Life for a
very large number of people in Iraq is considerably better
... and will be infinitely better when we can get on top of
the security situation.''

Three large explosions shook downtown Baghdad on Tuesday
evening, triggering a warning siren in the ``Green Zone''
housing the U.S. headquarters. Capt. David Gercken, a
spokesman for the U.S. 1st Armored Division, said rockets
hit a bus station, a propane station and an apartment
building, wounding two Iraqis, near -- but not in -- the
``Green Zone.''

U.S. Col. William Darley, said Tuesday that attacks against
U.S. forces peaked at more than 40 per day about two weeks
ago and have since dropped to about 30 per day -- about the
same as in October and well over the number in August and
September.

Since operations began in Iraq, 297 U.S. service members
have died in hostile action, including 183 since May 1 when
President Bush declared an end to major fighting.

Straw said the obstacles in Iraq shouldn't come as a
surprise.

``Military action is an uncertain business,'' he said.
``What we knew that we faced for certain was a tyrant in
Saddam Hussein and a highly organized network of terror and
repression, and we were never under any illusions that it
would be possible to remove this in one go.''

The U.S. command has in recent weeks pursued insurgents
more aggressively in an attempt to stop them before they
strike.

In one such operation, troops from the 3rd Armored Cavalry
Regiment encircled three towns along the Syrian border in a
search for weapons and fighters, according to a U.S. News
and World Report correspondent who returned from the area
Tuesday.

The troops established a cordon Thursday around the towns
of Husaybah, Karabilah and Sadah, total population 120,000,
and haven't let anyone in or out, the reporter said, adding
that troops were conducting sweeps through the encircled
territory.

The reporter, Bay Fang, said soldiers have detained more
than 300 people and discovered several weapons caches. One
held about 800 World War II-era torpedoes.

--------

Associated Press correspondent Jim Gomez in Tikrit
contributed to this story.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/international/AP-Iraq.html?ex=1070855354&ei=1&en=b03c239de6693526


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