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SADDAM CAPTURED

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
A video image displayed at a news conference in Baghdad early today of captured former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein being examined with his mouth open with a tongue depressor, apparently to get a DNA sample.



Isle reservists
prepare for duty
in post-Saddam Iraq

The latest wave of soldiers
face at least 12 months in
Iraq starting next year


More than 100 more Army reservists have been pulled from other Hawaii units to fill vacancies in a combat engineer battalion going to Iraq next year.

There was no information early today on whether their deployment would be affected by the capture of Saddam Hussein, announced at 2 a.m. Hawaii time.

At full strength, the Pacific Army Reserve's 411th Engineer Combat Battalion (Heavy) is supposed to have 630 soldiers, with 390 coming from Hawaii. Other members of the unit are stationed in Guam, American Samoa and Alaska. The full battalion will assemble at Schofield Barracks in early January to make the final preparations for the deployment to Iraq as part of the 1st Cavalry Division.

The latest batch of reservists notified of their Iraq duty spent the past week at Shafter Flats ensuring that their dental and medical records, emergency notification data and other personal information such as wills and powers of attorney were current.

Yesterday, the reservists -- all from Oahu -- and their spouses spent the day getting information on everything from how much money they can expect to dealing with the media.

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GREGG K. KAKESAKO / GKAKESAKO@STARBULLETIN.COM
Lori Arceo held her 4-month-old son, Nathan, yesterday while she and her husband, Sgt. Jeffrey Arceo, attended an all-day session at Shafter Flats to help prepare soldiers and their families for next year's deployment to Iraq. Arceo was among more than 100 soldiers reassigned from other units to fill vacancies in the Army Reserve's 411th Engineer Combat Battalion.



Donna Nakasue, whose husband was reassigned to the 411th the day before Thanksgiving, was still shocked over the involuntary assignment. Thanksgiving Day was the couple's 10th wedding anniversary.

Spc. Wes Nakasue, a military policeman with the 1101st Garrison Support Command for the past five years, said he also was shocked when he was told he would become a communication specialist with the 411th.

"My mother jokingly said she was going to complain to the president, telling him I shouldn't go because I am the only son," said Nakasue, 38.

Sgt. Jeffrey Arceo, 30, was reassigned from the 804th Signal Company to the 411th the day after Thanksgiving.

Unlike Nakasue, who now has to be retrained as a radio and telephone switch board operator, Arceo will hold the same job as a generator mechanic in the 411th as he does now in the signal company.

Lori Arceo said she was "pretty heartbroken" when her husband was called at work, at the Kahe Hawaiian Electric facility where he is a power plant operator, by his unit's executive officer and told that he was going to Iraq.

"I am sad," Lori Arceo said. "He's a really good dad," she added, noting that they have two children, a 2-year-old daughter, Zerimar, and a 4-month-old son, Nathan. "We're going to miss him a lot. This will be the longest we have been separated." The two have known each other since they met in high school in 1989 and have been married for four years.

"The bottom line is that it looks like now it will be boots on the ground for at least 12 months, but it could be as long as 24 months," said Capt. Joe Glaeser, plans officer for the 411th. "But there is no indication that will happen."

Maj. Kim Goffar, family readiness officer for the 9th Regional Support Command, said several Internet Web sites have been established to keep the families informed.

During a break, Donna Nakasue said she was glad to have attended the briefing, but admitted she was still apprehensive of her husband's pending deployment.

Lori Arceo said she and her family will try to make Christmas a little extra special this year since they will not be together next year. On Christmas Eve, her family may sleep over at her parents' home in Pearl City.

"We always open a few gifts on Christmas Eve ... and we want to spend more time together this year," she said.


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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Video image of captured former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein displayed at a news conference in Baghdad early today in an image from television.



U.S. forces capture
Saddam near Tikrit



BAGHDAD, Iraq -- American forces captured a bearded Saddam Hussein as he hid in a dirt hole under a farmhouse near his hometown of Tikrit, ending one of the most intensive manhunts in history. The arrest, eight months after the fall of Baghdad, was carried out without a shot fired and was a huge victory for U.S. forces.

"Ladies and gentlemen, we got him," U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer told a news conference Sunday. "The tyrant is a prisoner."

Saddam was captured Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in a specially prepared "spider hole" in a house in Adwar, a town 10 miles from Tikrit, said Lt Col. Ricardo Sanchez, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq. The hole was six to eight feet deep, with enough space to lie down, camouflaged with bricks and dirt and supplied with an air vent to allow long periods inside.

A U.S. defense official said Saddam admitted his identity when captured.

Sanchez, who saw Saddam overnight, said the deposed leader "has been cooperative and is talkative." He described Saddam as "a tired man, a man resigned to his fate."

In the capital, radio stations played celebratory music, residents fired small arms in the air in celebration and passengers on buses and trucks shouted, "They got Saddam! They got Saddam!"

Eager to give Iraqis evidence that the elusive former dictator had indeed been captured, Sanchez played a video at the news conference showing the 66-year-old Saddam in custody. Saddam, with a thick, graying beard and bushy, disheveled hair, was seen as doctor examined him, holding his mouth open with a tongue depressor, apparently to get a DNA sample. Saddam touched his beard during the exam. Then the video showed a picture of Saddam after he was shaved, juxtaposed for comparison with an old photo of the Iraqi leader while in power.

Iraqi journalists in the audience stood, pointed and shouted "Death to Saddam!" and "Down with Saddam!"

Though the raid occurred Saturday afternoon American time, U.S. officials went to great length to keep it quiet until medical tests and DNA testing confirmed Saddam's identity.

Washington hopes Saddam's capture will help break the organized Iraq resistance that has killed more than 190 American soldiers since President Bush declared major combat over on May 1 and has set back efforts at reconstruction. U.S. commanders have said that while in hiding Saddam played some role in the guerrilla campaign blamed on his followers.

In the latest attack, a suspected suicide bomber detonated explosives in a car outside a police station Sunday morning west of Baghdad, killing at least 17 people and wounding 33 more, the U.S. military said.

Saddam was being held at an undisclosed location, and U.S. authorities have not yet determined whether to hand him over to the Iraqis for trial, Sanchez said. Iraqi officials want him to stand trial before a war crimes tribunal created last week.

"This success brings closure to the Iraqi people," Sanchez said.

"Saddam Hussein will never return to a position of power from which he can punish, terrorize, intimidate and exploit the Iraqi people as the did for more than 35 years."

Ahmad Chalabi, a member of Iraq's Governing Council, said Sunday that Saddam will be put on trial.

"Saddam will stand a public trial so that the Iraqi people will know his crimes," said Chalabi told Al-Iraqiya, a Pentagon-funded TV station.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair hailed the capture, saying the deposed leader "has gone from power, he won't be coming back."

"Where his rule meant terror and division and brutality, let his capture bring about unity, reconciliation and peace between all the people of Iraq," Blair said in brief comments at his 10 Downing St. office.

In Tikrit, U.S. soldiers lit up cigars after hearing the news of Saddam's capture.

Some 600 troops from the 4th Infantry Division along with Special Forces captured Saddam, the U.S. military said. There were no shots fired or injuries in the raid, called "Operation Red Dawn," Sanchez said.

Two men "affiliated with Saddam Hussein" were detained with him, and soldiers confiscated two Kalashnikov rifles, a pistol, a taxi and $750,000 in $100 bills, Sanchez said. The two men were "fairly insignificant" regime figures, a U.S. defense official said.

Celebratory gunfire erupted in the capital, and shop owners closed their doors, fearful that the shooting would make the streets unsafe.

"I'm very happy for the Iraqi people. Life is going to be safer now," said 35-year-old Yehya Hassan, a resident of Baghdad. "Now we can start a new beginning."

Earlier in the day, rumors of the capture sent people streaming into the streets of Kirkuk, a northern Iraqi city, firing guns in the air in celebration.

"We are celebrating like it's a wedding," said Kirkuk resident Mustapha Sheriff. "We are finally rid of that criminal."

"This is the joy of a lifetime," said Ali Al-Bashiri, another resident. "I am speaking on behalf of all the people that suffered under his rule."

Despite the celebration throughout Baghdad, many residents were skeptical.

"I heard the news, but I'll believe it when I see it," said Mohaned al-Hasaji, 33. "They need to show us that they really have him."

Ayet Bassem, 24, walked out of a shop with her 6-year-old son.

"Things will be better for my son," she said. "Everyone says everything will be better when Saddam is caught. My son now has a future."

After invading Iraq on March 20 and setting up their headquarters in Saddam's sprawling Republican Palace compound in Baghdad, U.S. troops launched a massive manhunt for the fugitive leader, placing a $25 million bounty on his head and sending thousands of soldiers to search for him.

Saddam was one of the most-wanted fugitives in the world, along with Osama bin Laden, the leader of the al-Qaida terrorist network who hasn't been caught despite a manhunt since November 2001, when the Taliban regime was overthrown in Afghanistan.

Saddam proved elusive during the war, when at least two dramatic military strikes came up empty in their efforts to assassinate him. Since then, he has appeared in both video and audio tapes. U.S. officials named him No. 1 on their list of 55 most-wanted Iraqis, the lead card in a special deck of most-wanted cards.

Saddam's sons Qusai and Odai _ each with a $15 million bounty on their heads _ were killed July 22 in a four-hour gunbattle with U.S. troops in a hideout in the northern city of Mosul. The bounties were paid out to the man who owned the house where they were killed, residents said.

Adnan Pachachi, member of Iraq's U.S.-appointed Governing Council, said Saddam's capture will bring stability to Iraq.

"The state of fear, intelligence and oppression is gone forever," Pachachi said. "The Iraqi people are very happy and we look forward to a future of national reconciliation between Iraqis in order to build the new and free Iraq, an Iraq of equality."

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