Independent on
Sunday (London)
November 28, 2004, Sunday
PENTAGON HITMAN OR FANTASIST? ACTION!; BOUNTY HUNTER FROM HIS CELL IN
A NOTORIOUS AFGHAN JAIL.
By NICK MEO IN KABUL
In a luxury, Persian-carpeted cell in
Kabul's dreaded Pul-e-Charki prison, Afghanistan's most notorious bounty
hunter is putting the final touches to the film script about his bizarre
life.
Jack Idema joined the elite US special
forces unit the Green Berets after watching the John Wayne movie of the same
name. Now, Idema is angling for a Hollywood deal to make an action film
about his own violent adventures. A suitably macho account can be expected.
The 48-year-old New Yorker claims to have played a key role in vanquishing
the Taliban in 2001, killing dozens of them, according to his own account.
He says he tracked down Osama bin Laden twice - once at Tora Bora in 2001,
and a second time on the Pakistan border this year.
Even before his arrest in July for
running a private torture chamber in Kabul, Idema had been known among
Kabul's hard-drinking world of security men, chancers and fantasists as one
of the "larger-than-life" characters.
But it was his exploits running a
freelance terrorist-hunting team that propelled him to international
celebrity. A spellbound court heard how Idema had toured Kabul's streets
kidnapping Afghans with long beards, whom he suspected to be Taliban, and
interrogated them harshly. He was arrested only after he grabbed a Supreme
Court judge by mistake. The case raised serious questions about whether
Idema was really working for the Pentagon on a deniable black-ops mission,
as he claimed, or whether he was a freelance loose cannon.
Kabul police claimed Idema and two
other Americans were caught red-handed - with his suspects suspended
upside-down from the ceiling as part of a mission to find Bin Laden. Lawyers
for the bounty hunter say that is rubbish. They insist they have video
evidence that proves he was working for one of the Pentagon's most
controversial special operations commanders, born-again Christian General
William Boykin, the former head of Delta Force.
The lawyers believe Idema may have been
just one of many freelance mercenaries hunting for al-Qa'ida terrorists in
Afghanistan for the Pentagon and are calling for congressional hearings into
the claims, which they say are deeply embarrassing for the Bush
administration.
Robert Fogelnest, attorney for
cameraman Ed Carabello who was convicted with Idema, said: "The United
States knew about operatives catching terrorists using methods they didn't
want the world to know about. The easiest way to deal with them was to put
them before a kangaroo court and leave them to rot in an Afghan prison."
According to Afghan friends, life in
the prison is not so bad. Idema has become a hero to inmates and guards in
Pul-e-Charki - a giant, crumbling fortress on the wind-swept outskirts of
Kabul, built by the Soviets as a torture centre. Still wearing his
sunglasses and home-made special forces uniform, Idema struts through its
corridors before retiring to a spacious cell, provided thanks to his
Northern Alliance contacts.
Afghans describe the cell as luxurious,
at least compared to the stinking hellhole that most prisoners endure. Idema,
on the other hand, enjoys Persian carpets, heating and satellite TV. His
wing is the only one to have seen a fresh coat of paint in decades, and
during the summer he was able to relax in the flower garden. He is permitted
to buy food and drink from Kabul's expat shops. But one Afghan friend of
Idema said: "Jack is broke these days. He used to be famous for tipping
everyone with 10- or 20-dollar bills, but now he can hardly afford to pay
for anything."
Prison life has its dangerous side; an
al-Qa'ida inmate recently threatened to burn to death Carabello, who was
jailed for eight years although he claimed simply to be making a documentary
about Idema.
Idema's money problems, however, may be
near solution. He has found an agent, Beau Beaumont, to tout his film idea
around Hollywood. Mr Beaumont is reportedly confident. It is not known
whether the film will cover Idema's days in Panama, where he had the
reputation of being the craziest Green Beret in the army. He later attempted
to sue George Clooney, claiming the star had based his role in The
Peacemaker on him.
Akbar
SHALIZI
Bacterium infecting troops from Iraq, Afghanistan
(AP) - SAN ANTONIO - Government health officials are urging stronger
infection control procedures in military hospitals following a number of
infections among troops wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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The bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii, which is resistant to most antibiotic
drugs, could be infecting troops on the battlefield and ending up in field
hospitals along with casualties from conflicts in the Middle East, a doctor
says. The infection's spread in hospitals prompted health officials to
stress better infection control methods.
Dr. David Dooley, director of infection control at Brooke Army Medical
Center, and several other military physicians wrote on the growing number of
such infections in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a scientific
journal published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The report listed 102 cases of patients at military medical facilities who
developed serious A. baumannii infections, later spreading to the
bloodstream. Most are at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany or
Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.
"They are not as aggressive as some of the other infections we see," Dooley
told the San Antonio Express-News in Wednesday's editions. "But it is a
dangerous bug because it is unusually resistant to the antibiotics we
commonly use."
Such bacteria can trigger wound infections as well as systemic infections
that include pneumonia.
Five wounded GIs at BAMC in San Antonio have contracted the bacterium, which
exists in soil and water in certain parts of the world and can live on the
skin for several days.
Of the total cases, 85 involved GIs wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan.
SERGEI IVANOV: RUSSIA AND INDIA CONCERNED ABOUT
NEW DELHI, December 1 (RIA Novosti) - Russia and India are concerned about
the "pashtunisation" of Afghanistan, Russian Minister of Defence Sergei
Ivanov told journalists in New Delhi during his official visit to the Indian
capital.
"This is a straight way to war," the minister said.
The official specified that the Russian and Indian sides met Wednesday to
discuss the issue of international terrorism, particularly the situation in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
"We are almost unanimous on this matter. We can see that so-called moderate
Talibs and extremist Talibs are safe and sound and even claiming membership
in the country's administration," the minister pointed out.
"There are no "moderate" Talibs, there are either living or dead Talibs," he
aggregated.