• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Bodies of 2 missing US soldiers are found in Iraq

ENGINEERS WIFE

Full Member
Inactive
Reaction score
0
Points
210
Bodies of 2 missing US soldiers are found in Iraq By DAVID AGUILAR, Associated Press Writer


DETROIT - For more than a year, Gordon Dibler held out hope that his stepson, Army Pvt. Byron W. Fouty, would return home from Iraq. Then military officials delivered the grim news that the body of Fouty and another soldier captured during an ambush south of Baghdad had been found.

"Every day that he's been missing has been a day of `what could have been' ... but after hearing the news ... I'm still in shock," Dibler said Thursday, after military officials came to his Oxford home and told him his stepson's body was one of two discovered in the Iraqi village of Jurf as Sakhr.

Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Mich., and Army Sgt. Alex Jimenez, 25, of Lawrence, Mass., were kidnapped in May 2007 in the volatile area south of Baghdad known as the "triangle of death." The body of a third captured soldier, Pfc. Joseph Anzack Jr., 20, of Torrance, Calif., was found in the Euphrates River a year later.

Jimenez's father, Ramon "Andy" Jimenez, said he also received a visit Thursday from military officials who told him that his son's body and some of his son's personal effects had been discovered in Iraq. Speaking through a translator, he said the news "shattered all hope" the family had to "see Alex walk home on his own."

The military would not immediately confirm the mens' reports; the Pentagon generally waits 24 hours after notifying the next of kin before making a release public.

Lawrence Veterans Services Director Francisco Urena, who was at the Jimenez home Thursday night and translated for the soldier's father, said the family was given no details on the discovery of the bodies or the nature of the soldiers' deaths.

The men were identified using dental records, Dibler said, adding that the bodies of both soldiers were taken to Dover, Del., where military officials are expected to perform further tests to positively identify both men and determine a cause of death.

"It's a very sad relief," Dibler said. "But I know I have to go forward, not just for our family, but for the other men and women who are still doing their job over there."

He said he spent much of Thursday on the phone talking with family and friends, including Andy Jimenez. The soldiers' families had become friends over the past year, and Dibler said he always considered the two missing soldiers "our nation's sons."

"Byron went to Iraq to help people who couldn't help themselves," he said, adding that conditions there have since improved. "I know their sacrifice was not for nothing. It was not in vain."

Urena said the Jimenez family expects to receive Alex Jimenez's body in five days.

"He's very thankful for everybody from the community in Lawrence and throughout the U.S. who have provided him support during the difficult time the family has been through during the past 14 months," Urena said of Andy Jimenez.

The three soldiers, from the Fort Drum, N.Y.-based 10th Mountain Division, disappeared on May 12, 2007, after insurgents ambushed their combat team 20 miles outside Baghdad. An Iraqi soldier and four other Americans from the same unit were killed in the attack.

The soldiers were from Company D, 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment — nicknamed the "Polar Bears."

Jim Waring of the family support group New England Care for Our Military said he spoke to Jimenez' and Fouty's families Thursday night.

"It's going to be tough on them," he said. "They really had hoped they were alive."

Waring said his group had a banner for the missing soldiers that read: "Together they serve our nation and together they will come home."

"They did come home together, just not the way we wanted," Waring said.

___

Associated Press writer Sylvia Wingfield in Boston contributed to this report.



Serached couldn't find anything, merge thread if you have too.

This must be very hard for the families, hopefully they can get some closure now.  RIP
 
Rest in peace

My condolences to the family, friends & comrades of these two soldiers

At the going down of the sun
and in the morn,
we will remember them!

CHIMO!
 
Sad but expected I am afraid. The families at least get closure which is a blessing. Prayers are with Sgt Jimenez and PFC Fouty. :salute:

ALMIGHTY God, our heavenly Father, in whose hands are the living and the dead; We give thee thanks for all those thy servants who have laid down their lives in the service of our country. Grant to them thy mercy and the light of thy presence, that the good work which thou hast begun in them may be perfected; through Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord. Amen.

You rest with comrades
 
Additional info.

In a news release on July 11, the Army said an individual suspected of having information about the two infantrymen was captured and questioned by coalition special operations forces in Iraq July 1.

The suspect’s information led coalition troops to a vast, open desert area west of Jurf As Sakhr, where the two soldiers’ buried remains were found.

In keeping with soldiers’ pledge to never leave behind a fallen comrade, the Army had a standing mission to find Jimenez and Fouty, who were with 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division.

On July 8, soldiers assigned to 4th Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, under Multi-National Division-Center “secured the area until forensics experts came in,” MND-C spokesman Maj. Daniel Elliott said in an interview from Baghdad.

Elliott pointed out that the effort involved a number of coalition elements in a complicated search over a wide area.

“Every combat death is a tragedy, but this has been especially difficult for the families of these two 10th Mountain soldiers because of our not knowing for over a year of their whereabouts. We take solace in the fact that they are finally home,” MND-C commander Maj. Gen. Michael Oates said in the release.

Jimenez was a 25-year-old specialist when he was captured; he was promoted to sergeant during his disappearance. Fouty was 19.

Their remains were transported to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, D.C., for identification July 9, according to the release from Multi-National Corps-Iraq. The cause and date of their deaths has not yet been reported. Both soldiers had April birthdays.
 
Back
Top