Search  
Click Here!    
Good Morning America World News Tonight 20/20 Primetime Nightline WNN This Week
March 24, 2003
 
HOMEPAGE
NEWS SUMMARY
US
INTERNATIONAL
MONEYScope
WEATHER
LOCAL NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
ESPN SPORTS
SCI / TECH
POLITICS
HEALTH
TRAVEL
FEATURED SERVICES
RELATIONSHIPS
SHOPPING
DOWNLOADS
WIRELESS
INTERACT
VIDEO & AUDIO
BOARDS
CHAT
NEWS ALERTS
CONTACT ABC
Great Skiing and Riding! (Ad Served by Mediaplex)


(AP Photo)
Family of POW Hoping for Quick End to War
Family of U.S. Soldier Held Captive in Iraq Hoping for Quick End to War

The Associated Press


Print This Page
Email This Page
See Most Sent
Dow Falls Amid Fears of Prolonged War
Families of POWs Cope With News
Reflections on Iraq at the Oscars
DERBY, Kan. March 24

The half brother of a Kansas soldier held captive in Iraq said he wants the United States to finish the war "as fast as possible" so his brother can come home.

The family of 23-year-old Pfc. Patrick Miller said he was one of five prisoners of war seen Sunday answering questions on Iraqi television. There also was footage of at least four bodies.

The soldier's half brother, Thomas Hershberger, 27, said his mother spoke to Miller's wife Sunday. She had received confirmation from the military that Miller was being held by the Iraqis, he said.

"She is not doing the best right now," he said of his mother, who lives in New Mexico. "I haven't had a conversation with her without her crying."

Also Sunday, the mother of another captured soldier offered a plea to President Bush: "Please do something for my son," Anecita Hudson said of Army Spc. Joseph Hudson, 23, of Alamogordo, N.M.

Jean Offutt, a spokeswoman for Fort Bliss in Texas, said 10 or more of those who were missing Sunday were with the 507th Maintenance Company, which deployed last month with the 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade. The 507th is not considered a combat unit, officials said.

The video footage aired on Iraqi TV showed Miller answering questions in a shaky voice, his eyes darting back and forth between an interviewer and another person who couldn't be seen on camera.

Asked why he came to Iraq, he replied, "I come to fix broke stuff."

Asked if he came to shoot Iraqis, he answered, "No, I come to shoot only if I am shot at. They don't bother me, I don't bother them."

Miller, of the Wichita area, graduated from Valley Center High School. He and his family had been living in Texas, but his wife, Jessa, and their two children moved back to Park City to live with her mother when Miller was deployed in December. Valley Center and Park City are near Wichita.

Hershberger said Miller has a 4-year-old son and 7-month-old daughter. Miller was a welder before joining the military last summer to help pay student loans, he said.

Hershberger said his mother was not happy when Miller was deployed overseas, but Miller did not seem overly concerned.

"He is kind of cocky he didn't act scared at all," Hershberger said.

Hershberger said he did not know how his brother felt about going to Iraq, adding that he didn't know himself whether the United States should have gone to war with Iraq.

"I feel action should be taken for terrorists, but I think the U.S. government only has itself to blame for terrorists feeling the way they do," he said. "(The United States) puts themselves in other people's business that they shouldn't have been in."

Hudson's mother said her son identified himself on the video but didn't give any more information. She said he appeared to be uninjured, unlike some of the others in the video.

"It's like a bad dream, seeing your son get captured on TV," she said. Mrs. Hudson, who is of Filipino ancestry, said she saw the footage on a Filipino station she subscribes to.

A 1998 graduate of Alamogordo High School, Joseph Hudson did weight training at the school and liked fishing, bowling and card games, his mother said.

"I'm just praying that the other people (in the military) will get him out of there," said Mrs. Hudson, 53.

She said her son joined the Army to have a good future, not to fight. He is a mechanic who specializes in fixing trucks, she said.


photo credit and caption:
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, holds her daughter Bailey Hutchison's head while she comments on the U.S. POWs in Iraq, at the NCAA Midwest Regionals in Lubbock, Texas, Sunday, March 23, 2003. Arab satellite television showed what it said were American dead in an Iraqi morgue and others it said were U.S. troops taken prisoner. The footage aired by the Arab satellite station Al-Jazeera came from Iraqi television, showing four bodies in uniform, lying on the floor of the room, and interviews with at least five prisoners, speaking in American-accented English. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 
 
Click Here!
  RELATED STORIES
International Index
More Raw News
 
 INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES
U.S. Apache Helicopter Downed
Forces Prepare to Attack Northern Iraq
Poll: Support Holds Steady for War
Sgt. Detained in Attack on 101st Airborne
Ex-POWs Discuss U.S. Prisoners in Iraq

 


Copyright © 2003 ABCNEWS Internet Ventures.
Click here for:  HELP   ADVERTISER INFO   CONTACT ABC   TOOLS   PR   TERMS OF USE   PRIVACY POLICY

Family of sites:      ABC.com        ABC Family        ESPN.com        Disney.com        FamilyFun.com        GO Mail        Movies.com