You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Arabia
Ambush Kills American, Wounds Another in Kuwait
2003-01-21
A hail of automatic rifle fire killed an American working for the U.S. military and wounded another in an ambush on their car Tuesday near a U.S. base in Kuwait where Washington is preparing for a possible war on Iraq. The United States embassy condemned the incident as a terrorist attack. It was the third time since October that Americans have been killed or injured in attacks in Kuwait. The men were ambushed at around 9:15 a.m. (0615 GMT) while driving on a highway north of Kuwait City near Camp Doha, the main U.S. army base in Kuwait. The U.S. embassy said they were contractors with a firm working for the Defense Department.
Heard they were software engineers moving between camps.
Kuwaiti police said one or more attackers had opened fire from trees and bushes at the side of the road before escaping. Cartridge cases believed to be from rounds fired from a Kalashnikov rifle or rifles were found at the scene.
Reuters journalists at the scene said the dead man's body was removed from a tan-colored four-wheel-drive vehicle about two hours after the attack. Dozens of police sealed off roads in the area, and Kuwait's interior minister visited the scene.
One side of the vehicle was riddled with more than 20 bullets, and the windshield was also fractured. Some of the side windows had been shot out completely. A pool of blood was visible on the road, until police covered it with sand.
"We condemn this terrorist incident which has tragically cost the life of an innocent American citizen," the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait, Richard Jones, said in a statement. "We have full confidence that the Kuwaiti authorities will pursue their investigation of the incident vigorously and professionally."
The embassy said the injured man had been shot in the shoulder and thigh and was in hospital in Kuwait City.
More than 15,000 U.S. soldiers are in Kuwait and more are arriving every week ahead of a possible war with Iraq. The military also employs a large number of U.S. civilian contractors to help run its camps. Last November, a Kuwaiti policeman shot and seriously wounded two U.S. soldiers on a highway south of Kuwait City and the previous month two Kuwaitis attacked U.S. Marines training on an island, killing one. There have also been several reports of shots fired at U.S. troops training in the Kuwaiti desert.
Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah sent his condolences to his U.S. counterpart Colin Powell.
"Kuwaiti strongly condemns such criminal acts which aim to harm the historical relations and strong ties between two friendly countries," the state news agency quoted him as saying.
Earlier this week Kuwaiti officials said they had arrested a Kuwaiti soldier suspected of spying for Iraq. Kuwaiti newspapers have said the man had been plotting attacks on U.S. targets in Kuwait, including a possible attempt to poison U.S. troops. Kuwait is likely to be a launchpad for a U.S. invasion of Iraq if Baghdad does not satisfy Washington's demand that it prove itself free of weapons of mass destruction. Iraq insists it has no chemical, biological or nuclear arms. Kuwait is a key U.S. ally and the government is publicly grateful to Washington for leading the 1991 Gulf War that drove out occupying Iraqi troops from the oil-rich country. But many Kuwaitis -- and other Arabs -- are angry at the United States for its support for Israel against the Palestinians and policies in the region. Kuwait also has a vocal Islamist opposition. On the streets of Kuwait City, Kuwaitis said they were shocked by the incident.
"I am dismayed," said teacher Waleed al-Mullah. "If someone has a problem (with the U.S. presence) they should discuss it in a peaceful way and not grab a gun."
Going after soft targets. Expect that more of these will take place before its over.
Posted by:Steve

#2  Someone screwed the pooch. The Pentagon, long time ago, made a decision to trade off uniform support personnel for trigger pullers. The substitution of contractors, like this, for skilled grunts [which are expensive to train and even harder to retain in a free market system]was a choice. When the commanders on the scene fails to include the contractors in their 'force protection' planning and execution, this is the result. After the earlier shooting by a Kuwaiti of our soldiers, someone should have been bright enough to insure that these people were escorted or convoyed between secure locations. Someone needs a new rectal orifice ripped. As contractors, they didn't even have the ability to get Servicemens Group Life Insurance, so their families will probably be screwed too when the insurance company invokes the boilerplate exclusion for death during wartime. All because someone in uniform overthere is too busy and doesn't want to be bothered with the problem of taking care of contractors. I'm sure others are just lining up to take their place after this fiasco.
Posted by: Don   2003-01-21 10:25:50  

#1  Word has it they were from San Diego - a Kearny Mesa software firm supporting military tech hardware, and they'd only been in Kuwait a week or so
Posted by: Frank G   2003-01-21 10:04:31  

00:00