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Iraq
Iraqi colonel flees military training in Alabama
2007-03-22
An Iraqi air force colonel disappeared recently from an Alabama Air Force base and is being sought in a regional manhunt by federal and military agents, defense officials say. The colonel, who was not identified, was studying at the Air Command and Staff College at Maxwell Air Force Base, near Montgomery, since last winter in a leadership training course that is part of U.S. efforts to rebuild the Iraqi air force.

The officer disappeared along with his family, who were living either on the base or in the Montgomery area. He left a note stating that he was leaving the yearlong military course because he did not want to return to war-torn Iraq, said officials familiar with the case.
Check the landscaping companies and the chicken-processing plants.
Air Force security, FBI and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have started a search throughout the Southeast for the colonel and his family.

One official said that the Iraqi is a "high-interest" target and that Montgomery police are involved in the search. He is thought to be planning to hide in the United States or to be fleeing to Mexico. "He was a afraid to go back, and he's either here or trying to cross into Mexico," said one official.
Going north to south over the Rio Grande? Suppose that could happen.
Lt. Col. Gregg C. Bottemiller, a spokesman for the Air University at Maxwell, confirmed that the Iraqi was missing, but declined to comment further and would not disclose the circumstances surrounding the disappearance.

Air Force spokesman Capt. Tom Wenz declined to comment when asked whether the Iraqi posed a national-security risk or whether he may be linked to insurgents or terrorists. He referred calls to the Homeland Security Department and the Iraqi Embassy in Washington. An ICE spokesman had no comment.

The Air Force college hosts regular yearlong sessions for several hundred colonels, who are taught military operational and strategic topics. The last class, which began in August, included 78 foreign military officers from 66 nations.

The disappearance of the Iraqi officer is a setback for U.S. military efforts to rebuild the post-Saddam Hussein Iraqi air force and highlights continuing problems in finding reliable people to staff the Iraqi armed forces.

Spokesmen in Iraq briefed reporters on efforts to develop the Iraqi air force last week. Air Force Brig. Gen. Stephen Hoog, air commander for Multinational Force-Iraq, told reporters in Baghdad last week that the goal is to set up an air force that Iraqis can maintain. "It's not that they don't know how to run an air force. It's that they don't know how to do an air force in this environment. And we're trying to introduce some Western influence," Gen. Hoog said.

The current Iraqi air force consists of new recruits and rehires from the air force under Saddam's regime and has 950 Iraqis, including 83 trainees. Later this year, training will begin for helicopter and fixed-wing pilots.

The former Iraqi air force once had 900 modern aircraft. Currently, Iraq's forces have Bell Ranger, UH-1 and Russian Mi-17 helicopters. Its fixed-wing aircraft include C-130 transports and several light aircraft, such as SAMA CH-2000s and Seeker 2000s.
This answers the question of whether we are training their air force command and general staff. But the big question is are we training their fixed wing combat pilots?
Posted by:Anonymoose

#11  Cupid???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-03-22 23:43  

#10  Sinse, we take a number of officer from other countries into our war colleges and staff colleges. They are not learning to fly, they are learning the principles of war, staff planning, leadership, laws of land war, etc... The concept is to expose future high ranking officers to the US military and to build professional relationships. The program usually works well.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2007-03-22 23:34  

#9  Only if it was equipped for night ops. :-)

Aside from that, every good country boy knows that stolen watermelon tastes best.
Posted by: OldSpook   2007-03-22 22:42  

#8  So, OldSpook, was it you in that Chinook that landed in my watermelon patch near Echo and swiped some watermelons?
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2007-03-22 19:41  

#7  I've been to Alabama (Ft Rucker).

I can't blame him for running.
Posted by: OldSpook   2007-03-22 17:35  

#6  why can't he be trained over there
Posted by: sinse   2007-03-22 16:00  

#5  Look for him in the protected cities of NY or San Fran. Both he and his family will be safe from deportation.

Not sure about the fighter group, but the helicopter guys are being trained.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2007-03-22 12:08  

#4  I grew up just across the Alabama River from Maxwell. Used to sit out in the back yard, well, actually the whole farm was the yad, and watch the jets.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2007-03-22 11:44  

#3  A few students each year decide not to return home after graduating from the Defense Language Institute English Language Center. There was one two years ago, fast burner - NCO of the Year type from one of the Slavic countries. She turned up later working as a waitress in a Mexican resturant.
Posted by: Steve   2007-03-22 11:37  

#2  Maybe he figured he could lie low as an illegal and give his children a better future in America. I don't blame him - given the mayhem caused by the terrorists, his family is probably safer stateside.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2007-03-22 11:00  

#1  Just another undocumented immigrant; what's the big deal?
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-03-22 09:57  

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