http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,123603,00.html
Good to know they made it safely out of there.
British soldiers finally freed and with British officials
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Should have known
Looks as though they did not cross into Iranian waters.

Eight British servicemen claim they were "forcibly escorted into Iranian territorial waters" before being taken captive, the defence secretary has said.
Geoff Hoon said the six Royal Marines and two Royal Navy sailors maintained they had been operating in Iraq's waters and had not strayed into Iran's.
The servicemen were held for three days sparking a stand-off with Britain.
In a statement released by the Ministry of Defence, Mr Hoon said the MoD was looking into the servicemen's claim.
Mr Hoon also expressed concern about "the blindfolding of the men" during their captivity and added the UK had made representations to ... Iran."
New twist?
Tory foreign affairs spokesman Gary Streeter said the treatment of the men had been "intolerable" and he urged the government to make the "strongest possible representations" to Tehran.
"The revelation that our troops were forcibly escorted out of Iraqi waters into Iranian waters by warships ratchets this already serious incident onto a different level," he said.
For the Lib Dems Paul Keetch said: "This is potentially a new twist to the story. The GPS [global positioning system] equipment has yet to be returned. When it is, it may well shed more light on the matter."
The men were captured after their patrol boats were said to have strayed by mistake into the Iranian side of the Shatt al-Arab waterway.
Iran said the vessels had entered its waters without prior permission.
But Mr Hoon said: "In a recent debriefing the crews have said that they were operating inside the Iraqi border and were forcibly escorted into Iranian territorial waters.
"Our assessment continues and will be greatly assisted by the retrieval of navigational information in the Global Positioning System equipment carried by the crews."
Mr Hoon said the Iranians had failed to comply with Tuesday's deadline to return equipment carried by the men including three boats, radios and navigational equipment, weapons and ammunition.
Following the servicemen's release Iran's foreign minister Kamal Kharrazi said the equipment would be returned.
Porous border
One of the men returned home on Wednesday due to medical reasons connected with the incident and a further two were sent back to Britain as their tour of duty had ended.
The remaining five are continuing their work in Iraq.
The MoD said the detainees had been part of a Royal Navy training team heading to Basra when they were detained by Iranian guards.
They had been helping to re-train the Iraqi river patrol on a waterway renowned for its use by smugglers and foreign militants trying to infiltrate Iraq.
The southern stretch of the Shatt al-Arab forms the border between Iran and Iraq.
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