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<DIV><FONT size=2><STRONG>U.S. Probes if GIs Refused Iraq
Mission</STRONG><BR></FONT><FONT face=Verdana,Sans-serif><A
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<DIV><FONT face=Verdana,Sans-serif> <FONT size=1><FONT color=black
size=1>Oct 15, 1:14 PM (ET)</FONT><BR><BR></FONT><FONT size=2>By JOHN J. LUMPKIN
</FONT><FONT color=black size=2></DIV>
<P>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army is investigating reports that several members of a
reservist supply unit in Iraq refused to go on a convoy mission, the military
said Friday. Relatives of the soldiers said the troops considered the mission
too dangerous.
<P>The reservists are from the 343rd Quartermaster Company, which is based in
Rock Hill, S.C. The unit delivers food and water in combat zones.
<P>According to The Clarion-Ledger newspaper in Jackson, Miss., a platoon of 17
soldiers refused to go on a fuel supply mission Wednesday because their vehicles
were in poor shape and they did not have a capable armed escort.
<P>The paper cited interviews with family members of some of the soldiers, who
said the soldiers had been confined after their refusals. The mission was
carried out by other soldiers from the 343rd, which has at least 120 soldiers,
the military said.
<P>Convoys in Iraq are frequently subject to ambushes and roadside bombings.
<P>A whole unit refusing to go on a mission in a war zone would be a significant
breach of military discipline. A statement from the military's press center in
Baghdad called the incident "isolated."
<P>"The investigating team is currently in Tallil taking statements and
interviewing those involved. This is an isolated incident and it is far too
early in the investigation to speculate as to what happened, why it happened or
any action that might be taken," the coalition press information center said in
the statement, sent to The Associated Press in Washington.
<P>In the statement, U.S. military officials said the commanding general of the
13th Corps Support Command had appointed his deputy commander to investigate the
incident.
<P>The statement did not confirm several aspects of the relatives' stories,
including the number of soldiers involved and the reason they refused the
mission.
<P>The soldiers refused an order on Wednesday to go to Taji, Iraq - north of
Baghdad - because their vehicles were considered extremely unsafe, Patricia
McCook of Jackson, Miss., told The Clarion-Ledger. Her husband, Sgt. Larry O.
McCook, was among those detained, she said, saying her husband had telephoned
her from Iraq.
<P>The platoon being held has troops from Alabama, Kentucky, North Carolina,
Mississippi and South Carolina, said Teresa Hill of Dothan, Ala., who told the
newspaper her daughter Amber McClenny is among those being detained.
<P>Patricia McCook said her husband told her he did not feel comfortable taking
his soldiers on another trip.
<P>"He told me that three of the vehicles they were to use were 'deadlines' ...
not safe to go in a hotbed like that," she said, according to the newspaper.
<BR><!-- Subject: Iraq Unit Investigation --></P></FONT></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>