Did Oregonians medevac Iraqi leader after assassination attempt?

Did Oregonians medevac Iraqi leader after assassination attempt? »Play Video
An Iraqi policeman inspects the site of a bombing in Ramadi, 70 miles (115 kilometers) west of Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2009. Staggered explosions Wednesday killed scores and wounded an Iraqi provincial governor, officials said, in the worst violence in months to hit the western province that was formerly al-Qaida's top stronghold in Iraq.(AP Photo)

The Associated Press reports that win bombings — one an assassination attempt against an Iraqi provincial governor — killed 23 people and wounded the governor Wednesday in the worst violence in months to hit the western province that was once al-Qaida's top stronghold in Iraq.

Oregon National Guard medics flew two missions Wednesday from Ramadi, including one with an unidentified high-profile Iraqi patient on board. The U.S. military would not confirm whether the patient was the governor of the Iraqi province, injured in an assassination attempt.

Cali Bagby filed this report from Iraq for KVAL.com. Photos courtesy Spc. Grant Mcrobert.

RAMADI, Iraq -- Pilot Lt. Tyler Eikenberry, 31, of Portland, Ore., flew two flights on Wednesday from Ramadi to an emergency medical care location in the late morning and early afternoon.

On the first flight, Eikenberry transported an Iraqi patient, while another helicopter crew transported another high-profile Iraqi patient. Medevac soldiers were unable at this time to comment on the patient’s identity or injuries.

“The second time [on a mission that day] the ambulance came up and a mob of people were crowding the ambulance,” says Eikenberry, who watched as Iraqi soldiers, American soldiers and civilians crowded together at least fifty meters from the helicopter.

“And due to suicide bombers in the recent past [bombing crowded area], it kind of makes you nervous a little bit, when you see a crowded area, especially with your medic and crew chief out there being vulnerable,” said Eikenberry.

Medic Spc. Matt Mohr, 28, of Silverton, Ore., on the first mission of the day was also surprised to see over 100 people at the patient pick-up site.

“It was very hectic,” Mohr said.

On the ground in Ramadi, it was also the first time he interacted with an Iraqi doctor.

“He was very hard to understand; all he kept saying was to hurry up,” Mohr recalled.

Once inside the aircraft, Mohr focused on the patient, not the high-profile status, en route to a higher level of medical care.

“I try to take the same care, no matter who the patient is,” said Mohr. “I wasn’t really thinking who the patient is.”

In flight, crew chief Spc. Grant McRoberts, 22, of Salem, Ore., treated wounds that Mohr could not attend to immediately.

When the patient was handed over to a higher level of medical care, crew chief Spc. Kevin, Rankin, 31, of Portland, Ore., also had a unique situation during the unloading process. One of the patient’s two escorts began flipping through his wallet and taking out bills for Rankin.

“I turned him down, closed his hands around his wallet. I don’t know if he was thanking me or paying for gas,” said Rankin, who sees giving out money as a cultural difference between Americans and Iraqis. “It was no big deal.”

When Mohr and his crew returned to the Medevac base in Al Asad, Iraq, Charlie Company soldiers were waiting to help clean up the blood and medical equipment left inside the helicopter.

“We had at least 10 people working on that aircraft, scrubbing it down and just getting it ready for another mission, if we had one,” Mohr said.

For the Oregon Medevac unit, the day was like any other: they received a call for patient transports and they transported multiple patients to higher levels of care. “Something is just a little different each time,” said Rankin.

News reports said a suicide bomber critically injured the Governor Qassim al-Fahdawi of western Iraq’s Anbar province on Wednesday in Ramadi, but military officials cannot confirm the Medevac mission and the Governor are related.

Cali Bagby embedded with the Oregon Army National Guard from the 41st Infantry for KVAL.com. Her work has been published in the Washington Post and the Eugene Weekly.
More stories | Visit her Web site

 

Bombs kill 23 in Iraq's western Anbar province
KATHARINE HOURELD Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD (AP) — Twin bombings — one an assassination attempt against an Iraqi provincial governor — killed 23 people and wounded the governor Wednesday in the worst violence in months to hit the western province that was once al-Qaida's top stronghold in Iraq.

Also on Wednesday, a British hostage held for more than two years by militants was released safely in Baghdad and is now in the care of the British Embassy.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said in a statement in London that Peter Moore was released by his captors Wednesday morning and taken to Iraqi authorities.

"He is in good health, despite his many months of captivity. He is undergoing medical checks and he will be reunited with his family as soon as possible," Miliband said. "He is obviously — to put it mildly — delighted at his release."

A Shiite militant group called Asaib Ahl al-Haq, or League of the Righteous is believed to have been behind the abduction of five people, including Moore, from Iraq's Finance Ministry in 2007. Moore was working for a U.S.-based management consulting firm in Iraq at the time of his abduction, and the other four men taken were his security team.

The bodies of three of the bodyguards were later released and British officials have said the fourth, Alan McMenemy, is believed to be dead as well.

The attacks Wednesday in Anbar province were worrisome because the strategically important region was once the heartland of support for al-Qaida-linked militants, before many insurgents turned on the terror organization and joined forces with U.S. troops and the Iraqi government. The governor is the most senior Sunni leader to be attacked since then.

While violence in Iraq has dropped considerably since the height of the conflict, a reinvigorated insurgency in Anbar — which is also Iraq's largest province — could pose a serious risk to the country's stability as it prepares for March elections.

Two bombs exploded in Anbar's capital of Ramadi, 70 miles (115 kilometers) west of Baghdad, said police Lt. Col. Imad al-Fahdawi. First, a car driven by a suicide bomber blew up near a checkpoint on the main road near the provincial administration buildings.

"When the first explosion occurred, the governor walked out of his office, heading to the site to see what happened," al-Fahdawi said.

"A second suicide bomber with an explosives belt and wearing a military uniform tried to make his way through the crowd of people and was stopped by guards of the governor," and then blew himself up just yards from the governor, al-Fahdawi said.

It was not known whether the first bomb was designed to lure the governor out of his office, but insurgents commonly use staggered explosions as a way to maximize damage as rescuers and security officials rush to the scene.

While Iraqi soldiers have been accused of taking part in attacks in the past, military and police uniforms are easy to buy or steal in Iraq and insurgents often disguise themselves in such outfits.

The governor was taken by U.S. military transport to a hospital in Baghdad, said a U.S. military spokesman in Iraq, Maj. Joe Scrocca. He would not release information on whether he was being treated at a U.S. or Iraqi facility.

Another police official said the provincial police commander was wounded. The police official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

A spokesman for the governor, Mohammed Fathi, told the Al-Arabiyah news channel that bombers are trying to prevent the investment and reconstruction that has been going on as security in the region has improved.

"This violence is done by those who want to hamper rebuilding in Anbar," he said.

A doctor at the main hospital in Ramadi, Ahmed Abid Mohammed, said 23 people were killed and 57 injured. He said the governor suffered burns on his face and injuries to his abdomen and other areas.

American forces were helping evacuate casualties, establish security and carry out forensic investigations, said military spokesman Lt. Col. Curtis Hill.

Television footage from the blasts showed large black plumes of smoke rising from the scene as emergency and police vehicles rushed to the area with sirens blaring.

There are 18 provincial governors in Iraq. Anbar is primarily Sunni, the minority sect of Islam that ruled the country under former dictator Saddam Hussein. The province was the site of some of the war's most intense fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents in the key cities of Ramadi and Fallujah.

In 2006, many former insurgents began to rebel against al-Qaida, and joined forces with the U.S. military, who paid fighters to participate in the pro-government Sons of Iraq program.

The decision by the Sons of Iraq to join forces with U.S. and Iraqi forces to combat al-Qaida about three years ago is considered one of the key reasons for the drop in violence seen in Iraq today. But the group and many Sunni political figures have been targeted for cooperating with the Shiite-led government.

In the town of Khalis, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad, a bomb killed six pilgrims taking part in a procession to commemorate the death of a Shiite saint, said a Diyala province police spokesman, Capt. Ghalib al-Karkhi. He said the blast also wounded 24 people.

On Sunday, Shiite Muslims marked the death of the Prophet Muhammad's grandson, Imam Hussein. His death marked the split between Sunnis and Shiites, and under Saddam's Sunni-led government, such religious displays were effectively outlawed.

Now, Shiites are able to commemorate the occasion publicly, but they're often targeted by insurgents.


(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press)