News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terroriraqinsurgency200505-apr-may — Viewing Item


Insurgent leader zarqawi ill or wounded in hospital { May 5 2005 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050402277.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050402277.html

U.S. Says Zarqawi May Be Ill
Military Investigates Reports He Was at Ramadi Hospital

By Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, May 5, 2005; A21

AL ASAD AIR BASE, Iraq, May 4 -- The U.S. military is examining reports that insurgent leader Abu Musab Zarqawi was present last week at a hospital in Anbar province and the possibility that he may be ill or wounded, officials said Wednesday.

U.S. officials gave no details as to why they believe Zarqawi may be sick or injured. But U.S. military authorities were quoted this month as saying that Zarqawi had left medical information about himself on a laptop computer that was seized Feb. 20 in his closest known call with American pursuers. When his car was pulled over at a checkpoint outside Ramadi, Zarqawi fled on foot, leaving behind the laptop, photos of himself and contacts, officials said.

It was not clear whether suspicions about his health were linked to the seizure of the computer or grew directly out of Zarqawi's reported presence last week at a hospital in Ramadi, the capital of restive Anbar province. Zarqawi's group asserted in a written statement posted at two mosques, one of them in Ramadi, that the Jordanian-born militant was at the hospital last Thursday during a raid by U.S. forces but that the Americans missed him.

A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad, Lt. Col. Steven Boylan, confirmed Wednesday that officials had "received a tip that there were terrorists in and around the hospital in Ramadi."

U.S. and Iraqi forces "did go to the hospital to act upon the information," Boylan said. He did not confirm that Zarqawi was the target of the raid. The forces left without detaining anyone but were reviewing information from the operation, Boylan said.

Zarqawi is the most-wanted man in Iraq, and the United States has offered a $25 million reward for information leading to his death or capture. Zarqawi is believed by U.S. officials to lead a network of insurgent cells that has been behind many violent attacks in Iraq. American officials say Zarqawi is linked to some of last year's hostage beheadings and such attacks as the military-style assault last month on U.S. Marines at Abu Ghraib prison.

Known sightings of Zarqawi in recent months have all been in Anbar province. The district's tens of thousands of square miles are largely guarded by a scaled-back American force, with few Iraqi troops stationed outside Ramadi. Wide-open spaces and a generally porous border with Syria give militants room to roam and hide.

Military officials said this week that reported sightings of Zarqawi include one several weeks or months ago in the small town of Haqlaniyah, where he was believed to have given a sermon at a blue-domed hilltop mosque.

There were reports that Zarqawi was at the main hospital in Ramadi both on Wednesday and Thursday of last week. The Wednesday sighting was reported by Islamic newspapers. Separately, several people at the hospital said they had seen a group of armed men arrive at the hospital Thursday, followed by the Americans.

"They searched us one by one, and they checked our IDs," said Saad Safi, a patient at the hospital at the time of the U.S. raid. "The occupation forces searched the whole hospital but did not find anything. We hadn't expected them to come search for Zarqawi."

In a written statement Friday, Zarqawi's al Qaeda in Iraq group said Americans searched all the rooms down to the air-conditioning ducts but "were not able to find Sheik Abu Musab Zarqawi, even though he was inside the hospital."

The statement did not say why Zarqawi would have been at the hospital. He has not been known to have health problems or to have been injured. An Islamic Web site reportedly made a point of saying this year that Zarqawi was in good health.

Riyadh Abu Dhiba, an insurgent in an Iraqi militant group, said Thursday that Zarqawi had been visiting his top aide, who was hurt in an unspecified clash. Abu Dhiba, who belongs to a group called Mohammed's Army, said the Zarqawi aide is a foreigner.

The insurgent said Zarqawi at times has brought doctors to his hiding places to care for the injured. "Zarqawi is not ill at all," Abu Dhiba said.

Iraqi authorities say a suspected top lieutenant of Zarqawi's, Talib Mikhlif Arsan Walman Dulaymi, was captured in February. The government said Dulaymi moved money and equipment around the country for Zarqawi and arranged for safe houses.

Zarqawi's reported near-capture in February raised hope among U.S. military officials of apprehending him. Zarqawi is believed to move frequently to evade American forces.

U.S. military officials said capturing Zarqawi would not end the insurgency. Some say that eliminating the lieutenants who carry out operations for him is more important. But removing Zarqawi from the scene would be seen as a setback to insurgents in general, they said.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company



madaen-seige
300 iraqis killed in past 10 days { May 9 2005 }
American offensive kills 75 in western iraq { May 9 2005 }
American rocket hits car with kids { April 25 2005 }
American troops helicopter gunships assault desert villages { May 10 2005 }
Attack in kurdish area kills 45 police applicants { May 4 2005 }
Bomb kills 20 at iraq funeral { May 1 2005 }
Car bomb exploses outside movie theater { May 11 2005 }
Car bomb kills 8 at baghdad mosque { April 23 2005 }
Car bombings hits near baghdad girls school { May 24 2005 }
Cleric accuses occupier of creating sectarian war
Commercial chopper shot down by missile fire
Demonstrators demand US leave iraq { April 9 2005 }
General myers says insurgency same as year ago
Helicopter crashes killing nine
Helicopter shot down killing nine
Insurgency more mature and capable { April 19 2005 }
Insurgent leader zarqawi ill or wounded in hospital { May 5 2005 }
Insurgent violence escalates in iraq { April 24 2005 }
Insurgents bomb busy market in baghdad { May 12 2005 }
Insurgents claim executing helicopter survivor
Insurgents using bomb techniques from US army manual { May 3 2005 }
Iraq joint raids nets dozens of suspects
Iraq violence taking sectarian twist { May 16 2005 }
Iraqi blast may 2 2005 [jpg]
Iraqi legislator gunned down politically motivated
Iraqi legislator handcuffed and humiliated at US checkpoint { April 20 2005 }
Iraqi tribesmen requested US support to repel foreigners { May 16 2005 }
Iraqi troops lockdown baghdad { May 26 2005 }
Islamic clerics killed by terrorists in army uniforms { May 17 2005 }
Large scale insurgents attack on US base { April 12 2005 }
Many iraqis killed in US helicopter attack { April 12 2005 }
Series of attacks around baghdad kills 38
Shiites mass protest US presence in iraq { May 20 2005 }
Shiites politicians condemn attempt to spark sectarian war { May 21 2005 }
Soldier killed as shiite protesters stream toward capital { April 9 2005 }
Suicide bomber swervesinto crowded market killing 24
Terrorists are trying to play on sectarian sentiments { May 17 2005 }
Thousands of shiites loyal to alsadr protest { April 10 2005 }
Tit for tat killings inflame sectarian tensions in iraq
Two car bomb blasts kill 11 in baghdad
US figures show sharp global rise in terrorism { April 27 2005 }

Files Listed: 41



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple