In April 04, a group of foreign workers were kidnapped off the streets of Baghdad by Iraqi criminals. One of the italian hostages, Fabrizio Quattrocchi, was executed not long after that. The remaining hostages were Salvatore Stefio, Umberto Cupertino and Maurizio Agliana of Italy, and Jerzy Kos of Poland
When coalition forces received reliable intel on where the workers were being held, a daring rescue plan was put into play. On June 8th, operators from A Squadron, Delta Force, boarded MH-60k helicopters flown by the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment.
This building had been under close surveillance following intelligence received that the kidnapped workers were inside. This info is believed to have come from Polish units, who had received it from informers, was then shared with the Americans. The intelligence pictured was further enhanced by SIGINT operations which tapped and tracked the kidnapper's cell phones. It has been speculated that the ISA may have had a hand in both the SIGINT and subsequent close target reconnaissance of the target compound. The surveillance of the building established the kidnapper's routine, allowing for the rescue operation to be timed in order reduce the danger to the hostages inside.
Inside the compound, the 4 hostages heard the helicopters as they came in overhead. The MH-60Ks came in low and fast, flaring up at the last moment in order to come to a halt and allow the Delta operators to leap out. Seconds later, the rescuers were inside, clearing the rooms. The kidnappers were caught completely by surprise and offered no resistance and were rapidly restrained. The bewildered hostages were found tied up in dark and dusty rooms inside the compound. One hostage recounted how a Delta operator came in, cut off his bonds with a bolt-cutter and told him. 'You're mine', before leading him straight inside to and putting him on a helicopter.
Rodolfo Laurenti, Deputy Director of the Remediation Consortium of the Po River, checks the salinity of the river, at a desalination barrier in Porto Tolle, Italy, on the Delta river, Friday, July 29, 2022. The amount of water entering the delta from the Po River is at an all-time low. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
The amount of water entering the delta from the Po River is at an all-time low, hitting just 95 cubic meters (3,350 cubic feet) a second last month, due to drought conditions caused by a lack of wintertime snowpack and spring and summer rains. That is one-tenth of annual averages. It has been nearly two months since farmers have been able to tap the river water for agriculture.
And while deltas are by definition an area of exchange between fresh and salt water, the movement is becoming more and more one-directional: Inland penetration of saltwater has increased from two kilometers (just over a mile) in the 1960s and 10 kilometers (six miles) in the 1980s to an astounding 38 kilometers (nearly 24 miles) this year.
Grower Elisa Moretto, who runs a small family business, hopes they can salvage one-third of their crop this year, but that remains to be seen. If she can eke a profit is up to other forces, including increased fuel and fertilizer costs.
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