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Mission Statement:
To make the broader military community, and the public at large, better aware of the ongoing role of the SEABEES as U.S. Navy combat troops and construction workers heavily involved in national defense and humanitarian aid worldwide. |
Marines, sailors help unearth evidence of Saddam's crimes
Submitted by: 1st Force Service Support Group
Story by: Lance Cpl. Samuel Bard Valliere
AL ANBAR PROVINCE, Iraq(Aug. 13, 2004) -- Marines in Iraq assisted the
Kuwaiti government uncover several mass graves during July to locate the bodies of
87 people missing since the Gulf War.
The digs were supported by Task Force Justice, a I Marine Expeditionary
Force team that helps gather evidence of war crimes committed by Saddam Hussein
by unearthing remains of those killed during his regime.
For one of the recoveries July 15-19, the Justice Department's Regime Crimes
Liaison Office in Baghdad tapped the I MEF to erect a temporary camp in the
middle of the Iraqi desert and provide security for the excavation. An Iraqi
man associated with some of the murders tipped off the grave's location, said
Army Maj. Kate Van Auken, 37, one of the office's liaisons.
Providing much of the help, elements of the 1st Force Service Support Group
trucked through the desert in waves. The first group got there in the morning
and set up security and communications, said 1st Lt. Austin Mroczek, the
site commander.
The rest of the troops convoyed to the camp that afternoon. Several hours
after they arrived, the Marines as well as Navy Seabees had transformed the
once barren area into a camp for 91 troops - all of whom slumbered under the
stars.
The Seabees, from Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 14, based out of
Jacksonville, Fla., used a backhoe to dig fighting holes and trash pits for the
brief stay.
Marines from 3rd Battalion, 24th Marine Regiment's Weapons Company, part of
a reserve infantry unit based out of Springfield, Mo., with support from
elements of motor transportation detachments from Ebensburg and Erie, Pa.,
established several observation points around the perimeter of the camp.
When the Seabees went to uncover the bodies at the grave sites, which were
located a few hundred yards outside the camp, gun trucks from the company
escorted them and provided protection at the otherwise unsecured location.
Throughout the five-day mission, which was conducted entirely outdoors, the
temperature soared into the triple digits, leaving troops sweaty and fatigued
but not sluggish.
"The heat has made it pretty miserable, but Marines are going to do their
job whether it is 120 or negative 20," said Mroczek, a native of Marcellus,
Mich.
The temperature aside, troops seemed happy to be doing their part to help
convict Hussein and aid the Kuwaiti people. This dig unearthed 48 bodies.
"It's something that has to be done to prosecute Saddam Hussein, but it's
not like they don't have a preponderance of evidence against him anyway," said
Lance Cpl. Brenden C. Reary, 25, a reserve infantryman with Weapons Company
and native of Rolla, Mo.
A preponderance indeed; last year, after securing Baghdad, the I MEF
assessed 59 mass grave sites, diagramed the areas and questioned locals for
information of the sites' histories.
The Kuwaiti government was missing a total of 605 people before the war with
Iraq began, said Van Auken.
To date, 322 skeletal remains have been found, and 167 of them positively
identified as Kuwaiti through DNA testing or comparing dental records at
independent labs in Kuwait, the United States, France, the United Kingdom and
India, said Van Auken. The rest have not yet been through the identification
process.
The Regime Crimes Liaison Office is also coordinating the excavations of
mass graves full of Kurdish and Shia Iraqis killed by Saddam in an effort to
collect further evidence of crimes against humanity.
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