http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2008-02-05-camps-usat_N.htm
 
Al-Qaeda video shows boys training to kill, kidnap      
By Jim Michaels, USA TODAY
A video that shows young boys being trained in kidnapping and assassination
was discovered during a raid on an al-Qaeda safe house in Iraq, the U.S.
military said Tuesday.

The video shows about 20 boys wearing ski masks and carrying pistols,
assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. In some cases the
weapons appear to dwarf the youngsters carrying them.

Excerpts, which were viewed by USA TODAY, appear to show the boys running
through training exercises under the supervision of trainers, said Rear Adm.
Gregory Smith, spokesman for the coalition command in Iraq. Portions of the
video, the content of which could not be independently verified, will be
released publicly today.

An analysis of the video provided by the U.S. command in Baghdad said the
boys were proclaiming allegiance to al-Qaeda.

The tape was found among other al-Qaeda material uncovered during a raid
north of Baghdad on Dec. 4, Smith said.

Smith said the video was being released to illustrate al-Qaeda's increasing
willingness to use women and children to carry out its objectives.

"That is a disturbing trend that obviously shows the desperation that
al-Qaeda is currently going through to use whatever means possible to
achieve its ends," Smith said. "It knows no bounds."

Last week terrorists used two young mentally disabled women strapped with
remotely detonated explosives to blow up markets in Baghdad, killing dozens,
said Maj. Gen. Abdul Kareem al-Ezzi of the Iraqi Interior Ministry.

Women have been suicide bombers in recent attacks, and a teenager was used
in a suicide attack in Anbar province, west of Baghdad, last month. It
violates Muslim religious beliefs to use women in fighting.

The video was captured during a raid targeting an al-Qaeda leader in the
town of Khan Bani Saad.

A date stamp on the video indicates it was taken last summer.

Al-Qaeda forces have been pushed north from the Baghdad area in the past
year as the U.S. counterinsurgency strategy has tightened security around
the capital. U.S. and Iraqi forces have launched offensives to clear
al-Qaeda sanctuaries there.

A U.S. military description of the video provided by Smith said one of the
trainers spoke with an Iraqi accent.

The written description said a narrator at one point spoke with an Egyptian
accent.

It is not clear who the boys are or how they were brought into the training.

U.S. military officials also plan to release a video today showing Iraqi
forces raiding a home to release an 11-year-old boy who had been kidnapped
from his home by insurgents in the Kirkuk area, Smith said.

Kidnappers demanded a $100,000 ransom from the family.



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