Six U.S. Prisoners of War found alive

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Marines Find Six U.S. Prisoners of War -Report
Sun April 13, 2003 06:50 AM ET

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - U.S. forces pushing north from Baghdad have found six U.S. prisoners of war who are now safe with a Marine unit, CNN reported on Sunday.
The television network quoted a reported traveling with the U.S. forces, James Kitfield of the National Journal, as saying information was still sketchy.

"Word just got through... They are alive and I don't have more information than that," Kitfield said in a telephone interview on CNN.
 
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Great News!!
 

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WASHINGTON — U.S. Marines have found seven missing U.S. troops on the road between Baghdad and Tikrit and they appear to be healthy, Gen. Tommy Franks said Sunday.

An Iraqi tipped off the Marines who were near Samarra and were closing in on Tikrit, the hometown of Saddam Hussein, that they would shortly "come in contact with a number of Americans," Franks told Fox News

"I believe our guys picked them up on the road," he said.

"I know they're in good shape and I know they're in our hands and under our control now," he told reporters.

[Television news reports said one of the rescued soldiers was an African-American woman, leading to hopes that Army Specialist Shoshana Johnson, one of five soldiers from the 507th Maintenance Company paraded on Iraqi television after their capture March 23, had been rescued.]

Franks said he had been reluctant to release the information because he was unsure whether the group was among five listed as missing or seven listed as POWs.

Franks originally said six were found. Central Command later that seven American servicemen were safe.

Pentagon officials have committed to tracking down 12 soldiers still missing or captured since the spectacular rescue of Pfc. Jessica Lynch on April 1, but until Franks' revelation, there appeared to be no leads.

Franks said he was reluctant to discuss the matter further until he had better information — but he made sure to underscore once again his commitment to rescuing coalition captives.

"For sure we're going to take care of our own," he told reporters. "This is very good news."

Officials had been sounding an upbeat note in recent days, saying more people were willing to talk and share secrets about potential POW sightings now that Saddam Hussein's henchmen are gone.

"What we're finding now is that the regime has been moved away, people will speak about what it is they know," U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks at U.S. Central Command in Doha, Qatar said Saturday during a briefing. "And so, we suspect that much of the information that will assist us either in finding prisoners of war from this conflict or previous conflicts ... will come by way of the elimination of the regime."

Lynch, who was rescued April 1 from a hospital in the southern city of Nasiriyah after an Iraqi civilian tipped soldiers off, became the first POW to return home Saturday.

The United States lists five other soldiers as missing and seven as prisoners of war
 
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Former POW Spc. Shoshana Johnson is escorted by Marines to C-130 aircraft.

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