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Vietnam War POW/MIA issue

The Vietnam War POW/MIA issue concerns the fate of United States servicemen who were reported as missing in action (MIA) during the Vietnam War and associated theaters of operation in Southeast Asia.

Following the Paris Peace Accords of 1973, 591 U.S. prisoners of war (POWs) were returned during Operation Homecoming. Many of those missing were airmen who were shot down over North Vietnam or Laos. Investigations of these incidents have involved determining whether the men involved survived being shot down; if they did not, the U.S. government made efforts to recover their remains. Progress in resolving these cases was slow until the mid-1980s, when relations between the United States and Vietnam began to improve and more cooperative efforts were undertaken. Normalization of the U.S. relations with Vietnam in the mid-1990s was a culmination of this process.

Considerable speculation and investigation have been devoted to a hypothesis that a significant number of missing U.S. service members from the Vietnam War were captured as prisoners of war by communist forces and kept as live prisoners after U.S. involvement in the war concluded in 1973. A vocal group of POW/MIA activists has maintained that there has been a concerted conspiracy by the Vietnamese and U.S. governments since then to hide the existence of these prisoners. The U.S. government has steadfastly denied that prisoners were left behind or that any effort has been made to cover up their existence. Popular culture has reflected the "live prisoners" theory. Several congressional investigations have looked into the issue, culminating with the largest and most thorough, the United States Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs of 1991–93, which found "no compelling evidence that proves that any American remains alive in captivity in Southeast Asia."[1]

Origins edit

The origins of the POW/MIA issue date back to during the war itself. Suffering from a lack of accurate intelligence sources inside North Vietnam, the United States never had solid knowledge for how many U.S. prisoners of war were held.[2] Indeed, the United States often relied upon possibly inaccurate North Vietnamese newspapers and radio broadcasts to find out who had been captured, as well as memorized lists of names brought out by the few U.S. POWs given early release.[2] As the Department of Defense built up lists of those in the categories of killed in action, killed in action/body not recovered, prisoner of war and missing in action, its tentative numbers fluctuated, but most of the time, the number of expected returnees upon war's end was around 600.[3] However, the Nixon administration had made return of the POW's one of its central arguments to the American public for prolonging the war and bringing North Vietnam to terms. In doing so, the administration stated the number of POW's at issue, at one point stating that there were "fifteen hundred American Servicemen" held throughout Southeast Asia.[3] These higher numbers would be the focus of much of the controversy in the issue to come.[3]

Following the Paris Peace Accords of January 1973, U.S. prisoners of war were returned during Operation Homecoming during February through April 1973. During this, 591 POWs were released to U.S. authorities; this included a few captured in Laos and released in North Vietnam. U.S. President Richard Nixon announced that all U.S. Servicemen taken prisoner had been accounted for.[4] At that time, the United States listed 2,646 Americans as unaccounted for,[5] including about 1,350 prisoners of war or missing in action and roughly 1,200 reported killed in action and body not recovered.[6] The low numbers of returnees from Laos caused some immediate concern, as previous Pentagon estimates were as high as 41 for prisoners held there, although only a few had been known to be captured for certain.[7] By late 1973, the remains of over 700 Americans killed in Southeast Asia had been returned and identified.[8]

Investigation of the fate of all the missing service personnel would end up residing with the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office. The Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command also played a major role in subsequent investigations. In 1973, the Defense Department established the Central Identification Laboratory–Thailand to coordinate POW/MIA recovery efforts in Southeast Asia.[9][10]

The United States conducted some limited operations in South Vietnam in 1974 to find the remains of those missing and pursuant to the Paris Accords, the North Vietnamese returned some remains too. These efforts halted following the collapse of the Accords and the fall of South Vietnam in 1975, and over the next ten years, little progress was made in recovering remains.[5]

During the late 1970s and 1980s, the friends and relatives of unaccounted-for U.S. personnel became politically active, requesting the United States government reveal what steps were taken to follow up on intelligence regarding last-known-alive MIAs and POWs. When initial inquiries revealed important information had not been pursued, many families and their supporters asked for the public release of POW/MIA records and called for an investigation.[citation needed]

U.S. Private First Class Robert R. Garwood is often cited as the last U.S. POW from the Vietnam War. In 1979, Garwood reemerged, claiming he and other POWs had remained imprisoned after the war.[11] In a court-martial shortly after his return, he was found not guilty of desertion, solicitation of U.S. troops in the field to refuse to fight and to defect, and maltreatment. However, he was convicted on February 5, 1981, of communicating with the enemy and of the assault on a U.S. prisoner of war interned in a POW camp.[12] Later independent investigations found no substantial evidence to support Garwood's claims and a Department of Defense investigation published in 1993 concluded Garwood was a collaborator with the enemy.[11] A subsequent 1993 investigation conducted directly by Senator Bob Smith claimed to have found the building where Garwood was imprisoned, but the building's connection to Garwood is disputed.[13]

POW/MIA activist organizations edit

 
The National League of Families' POW/MIA flag; it was created in 1971 when the war was still in progress.

The National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia was created by Sybil Stockdale, Evelyn Grubb and Mary Crowe as an originally small group of POW/MIA wives in Coronado, California and Hampton Roads, Virginia in 1967.[14][15] Sybil Stockdale's husband, Navy Commander James Stockdale, was shot down in 1965 and she was determined to make the American people aware of the mistreatment of U.S. POW's. This publicity resulted in better treatment of U.S. POW's from fall 1969 on.

After the war, the National League of Families became the leading group requesting information about those still listed as missing in action. It was led by Ann Mills Griffiths. Its stated mission was and is "to obtain the release of all prisoners, the fullest possible accounting for the missing and repatriation of all recoverable remains of those who died serving our nation during the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia." The League's most prominent symbol is its POW/MIA flag. Newt Heisley designed this flag to represent America's missing men.[16] This group was more established, less radical and more connected to the government.[17]

The National Alliance of Families For the Return of America's Missing Servicemen was founded in 1990. Its goal was and is to resolve the fates of any unreturned U.S. prisoners of war or missing in action from World War II on forward, not just Southeast Asia and to gain the return of any live prisoners. It is a 1980's-origined splinter from the National League of Families,[18] created by members who were dissatisfied with Ann Mills Griffiths' leadership.[18] Compared to the older group, the National Alliance took a more activist, radical stance, especially towards belief in the existence of live prisoners in Southeast Asia.[17]

The chair and co-founder of the group is Dolores Apodaca Alfond, whose brother Major Victor Joe Apodaca, Jr. was shot down in 1967 during the Vietnam War.[19] The group was visible during the Kerry Committee hearings of the early 1990s,[19] but disagreed with the committee's findings that there was no compelling evidence of any live prisoners in Southeast Asia.[20]

Businessman and POW/MIA advocate Ross Perot, who had done much to help POW families during the war,[21][22] was also very active on this issue.

Recovery with "rescue" edit

From the perspective of the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency's history of the issue, by the late 1980s, the United States and Vietnam increased the frequency of high-level policy and technical meetings to help resolve the POW/MIA matter. The Vietnamese began allow U.S. government search parties to operate within the country. The Laotian government also agreed to joint crash-site excavations in the late 1980s. In Cambodia, similar joint efforts began in the early 1990's. By 1992, major joint field operations were taking place in all three countries, operations that would carry on for years to come.[23]

A number of individuals were not satisfied with or did not trust U.S. government actions in this area and took their own initiative. Retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jack E. Bailey created Operation Rescue, which featured a former freighter and smuggling boat named the S.S. Akuna and solicited funds from POW/MIA groups.[24][25] While Bailey did pick up some Vietnamese refugees, [24] he never produced any prisoners and the boat spent years never leaving its dock in Songkhla in Thailand.[25] The effort did, however, prove adept at bringing in money through the Virginia-based Eberle Associates direct mail marketing firm.[25][24] Financial reports indicated that Operation Rescue spent 89 percent of the funds it raised on further fundraising.[25]

During the 1980's, former United States Army Special Forces member Bo Gritz undertook a series of private trips into Southeast Asia, purportedly to locate U.S. POW's whom some believed were still being held by Laos and Vietnam, for example at location Nhommarath. These missions were heavily publicized and controversial – for instance, as some commentators stated, few successful secret missions involve bringing to the border towns females openly marketing commemorative POW-rescue T-shirts.[26][27]

One such mission in 1982 was to free POW's reported to be in Laos; Gritz led 15 Laotians and 3 Americans, but they were ambushed shortly after crossing the border from Vietnam to Laos and the mission failed.[28] Command Sergeant Major Eric L. Haney, a former Delta Force commando and a holder of the live prisoners belief, later wrote that beginning in 1981 his unit was twice told to prepare for a mission involving the rescue of U.S. POW's being held by the North Vietnamese in camps in Laos, but both times the missions were scrubbed, for reasons unclear.[29] [30] Haney later said that years later he met a former senior member of the North Vietnamese diplomatic corps, who asked him why the U.S. never tried getting their POW's back after the war's end.[29] Regarding a Laos mission, Lieutenant General William G. "Jerry" Boykin, a former Commander of Delta Force, briefly mentions in his 2008 memoir that at one time, Delta Force had been engaged in planning for a mission to "infiltrate Laos to search for American MIA's", but that the idea, like several unrelated missions that Delta Force had considered during its early years, had not gone forward due to the White House thinking it too risky a venture.[31]

Another figure of the 1980's was Scott Barnes, who claimed he had both been in a secret operation in Cambodia and had seen an American POW.[32] His actions caused significant dissension among POW/MIA activists, especially once he claimed that he had seen more American POW's in Laos but had been ordered by the Central Intelligence Agency to assassinate them.[32][33] He published the 1987 book BOHICA that related this story.[33] The National League of Families ended up accusing him of exploiting the MIA issue for personal gain, as one wife had mortgaged her house to fund him.[32] Barnes, who had concocted much of his purported military background, would subsequently become a controversial figure within Ross Perot's 1992 presidential campaign.[34]

A former American POW, Eugene "Red" McDaniel, also became convinced that American prisoners had been left behind, and became active in the issue during the 1980s and early 1990s.[35]

Effect on popular culture edit

In the words of one analysis, "The notion that the United States may have left men behind was hard to fathom, and Americans chose to partly solve this complex problem through fictional characters."[28]

This was especially true in Hollywood films. The first was Chuck Norris's 1978 Good Guys Wear Black, which postulated a cynical U.S. government writing off MIAs with a bogus mission.[28] 1983's Uncommon Valor, starring Gene Hackman, followed suit, as did Norris again in 1984 with Missing in Action.

The most visible film in this theme was Sylvester Stallone's Rambo: First Blood Part II in 1985, which did the most to popularize the idea that U.S. POWs had been left behind after the war and that the government had no real interest in their rescue.[28] The Rambo character, who in this film may have been partly modeled after Bo Gritz,[36] was a Vietnam veteran commando still haunted by the multiple failures of the war. The pivotal moment of the film occurs when Rambo, realizing he was betrayed by the U.S. government and under torture from the Vietnamese and their Soviet allies, is put into radio communication with the officer who ordered the mission and tells him, "Murdock. I'm coming to get you!"[37][38] Rambo and the Norris films were commercially successful in both the United States and in Thailand and other parts of Southeast Asia, and did much to perpetuate the stock image of American prisoners held in bamboo cages.[39]

Rambo was followed by Norris's 1985 prequel Missing in Action 2: The Beginning, as well as other films such as P.O.W. The Escape (1986) and Dog Tags (1990) that shared similar conceits.[28] The Vietnam war POW/MIA issue was also explored in some U.S. television series. The long-running series Magnum, P.I. included multiple episodes in the mid-late-1980s whose central theme was the possibility of U.S. POWs remaining in Vietnam.[40] The 1997 The X-Files episode "Unrequited" also dealt with this notion. The POW/MIA issue was also part of a key story-line in the series JAG in the late 1990s where the father of central character Harmon Rabb had been an MIA in Vietnam. During the second, third and fourth seasons, evidence gradually mounted that Harm Sr. had been relocated to the Soviet Union where he had later escaped and been killed by Soviet soldiers in Siberia.[41]

Many Vietnam War songs released in the United States dealt with various aspects of the POW experience, with over 140 such songs identified by the Vietnam War Song Project. Many were obscure and never reached a popular audience or achieved commercial success. In the early-to-mid-1970s they largely looked at welcoming the prisoners home, and the impact of the war on veterans and their families. The only one to become a hit was Merle Haggard's 1972 number one country single "I Wonder If They Ever Think of Me". In the 1980s, some POW/MIA songs took a similar approach to American Vietnam War films, which suggested that many hundreds of U.S. prisoners remained in Vietnam and that the U.S. government had abandoned them.[42]

The "live prisoners" debate edit

Several committee investigations within the U.S. Congress took place over the years.[43] Some members of Congress were quite active on the issue.

For Vietnam veteran Bob Smith, Representative and later Senator from New Hampshire, the fate of possible missing or captured Americans in Vietnam had been Smith's major issue since his arrival in Congress in 1985.[44] His interest was partly motivated by his own experience growing up without knowing how his own father died in World War II.[44]

North Carolina Congressman Bill Hendon, who served two terms in the early-mid-1980s, was also quite active on the issue. He and Smith met with President Ronald Reagan in January 1986 to discuss their belief that Vietnam was still holding U.S. prisoners, and that U.S. intelligence agencies knew this but that the bureaucracy within the agencies was covering it up from even the Secretary of Defense.[45] Reagan termed Hendon "way out yonder" on the issue, and after Vice President George H. W. Bush reported that even Smith would not agree with Hendon on some of these claims, Reagan concluded that "Bill is off his rocker".[45]

New York Congressman John LeBoutillier, who served one term in the early 1980s, became interested in politics due to POW matters. After leaving Congress, he continued to be active in POW/MIA affairs. He founded the Sky Hook II Project, dedicated to recovering living U.S. POWs in Southeast Asia. He has made frequent trips to Laos and Vietnam and also met with Laotian and Vietnamese leaders in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Jakarta, Vientiane, and western cities. Another political figure active in the POW/MIA issue was Tom Walsh, who became mayor of Casper, Wyoming, and a member of the Wyoming House of Representatives, who made trips to Southeast Asia to search for information on POWs and MIAs.[46]

The POW/MIA issue heated up in the early 1990s. Serious charges were leveled at the Bush administration (1989 to 1993) regarding the POW/MIA issue.[47] The United States Department of Defense, headed by Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, was accused of covering up information and failing to properly pursue intelligence about U.S. POW/MIAs.[48]

Ranking minority member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina, became interested in the matter. In October 1990 his chief staff aide, James P. Lucier, prepared a report stating that it was probable there were live POWs still being held and that the Bush administration was complicit in hiding the facts.[49] The report also alleged that the Soviet Union had held U.S. prisoners after the end of World War II and more may have been transferred there during the Korean War and the Vietnam War.[49] Helms stated that the "deeper story" was a possible "deliberate effort by certain people in the government to disregard all information or reports about living MIA-POWs."[49] This allegation was followed in May 1991 by Helms' release of a minority report of the Foreign Relations Committee, entitled An Examination of US Policy Toward POW/MIAs, which made similar claims and concluded that "any evidence that suggested an MIA might be alive was uniformly and arbitrarily rejected...."[50] The issuance of the report angered other Republicans on the committee, and after charges were made that the report contained errors, innuendo, and unsubstantiated rumors, Helms distanced himself from the POW/MIA issue.[49] (This and other personnel matters led to Helms firing Lucier in January 1992.[51])

A July 1991 Newsweek cover photograph purported to show three U.S. POWs still being held against their will, which increased general public interest in the issue.[52] However, the photograph turned out to be a hoax.[52] Polls showed that a majority of Americans believed live POWs were indeed still being held captive;[53] a July 1991 Wall Street Journal poll showed 70 percent of Americans believing this, and that three-fourths of them believed the U.S. government was not doing what needed to be done to gain their release.[54]

Interest in the matter intensified in June 1992 when President of the Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin told NBC News in an interview that some Americans captured during the Vietnam War may have been transferred from Hanoi to the Soviet Union: "Our archives have shown that it is true, some of them were transferred to the territory of the former U.S.S.R. and were kept in labor camps. We don't have complete data and can only surmise that some of them may still be alive."[19]

Ross Perot stated that he believed that hundreds of U.S. servicemen were left behind in Southeast Asia at the end of the U.S. involvement in the war,[55] and that government officials were covering up POW/MIA investigations in order to not reveal a drug smuggling operation used to finance a secret war in Laos.[56]

Retired United States Army general, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and head of the U.S. POW/MIA delegation in Hanoi, John Vessey,[57] defended administrations' and the military's role in trying to get the Vietnamese to improve their efforts in ascertaining the fate of missing U.S. personnel.[57] Vessey had succeeded in 1988 in convincing the Vietnamese to permit U.S. search teams to operate throughout the country.[5] Vessey categorically rejected the notion of a government conspiracy, saying that he had never seen evidence of one at any time in his military career, and adding that, "American soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines are not conspirators."[58] United States Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney said that Vietnamese cooperation was improved but still needed much more improvement.[59]

For critics and skeptics, the allegations failed to convincingly answer the question as to what reason the Vietnamese (and other neighboring countries) would have to keep living prisoners. They could have been returned post-war, or being inconvenient witnesses, simply executed. Proponents of the theory often claimed that the prisoners were initially held back as part of a scheme to gain war reparations from the United States, as cheap labor, or both;[60] after the U.S. refused to pay reparations, they then continued to be held so that the Vietnamese, wanting to be accepted and taken seriously by the international community, would not have to admit to what they had done.

Kerry committee edit

Senator Bob Smith introduced a 1991 resolution to create a Senate Select POW/MIA Committee.[43] Senator and fellow Vietnam War veteran John Kerry was the chair of the committee, and its third key member was Senator and former Vietnam War POW John McCain. Compared to earlier congressional investigations into the POW/MIA issue, this one had a mandate to be more skeptical and ask harder questions of government officials than before.[43] The committee's work included more visits to Vietnam and getting the Department of Defense to declassify over a million pages of relevant documents.[61] Kerry and McCain said that they had gotten the Vietnamese to give them full access to their records, and that they had spent thousands of hours trying to find real, not fabricated, evidence of surviving Americans.[61]

Some of the most publicized testimony before the committee came in September 1992, when former Nixon Defense Secretaries Melvin Laird and James Schlesinger said that the U.S. government had believed in 1973 that some U.S. servicemen had not been returned from Laos, despite Nixon's public statements to the contrary.[4] Schlesinger said, "As of now, I can come to no other conclusion. [But] that does not mean there are any alive today."[4] Laird said in retrospect of Nixon's assurances that all POWs were coming home, "I think it was unfortunate to be that positive. You can't be that positive when we had the kind of intelligence we had."[4] In reaction to the testimony, Kerry said, "I think it's quite extraordinary when two former secretaries of defense both give evidence documenting that they had information, or they believed personally, that people were alive and not accounted for in Operation Homecoming."[4]

The committee issued its unanimous findings on January 13, 1993. In response to the central question of whether any U.S. POWs were still in captivity, it stated:

While the Committee has some evidence suggesting the possibility a POW may have survived to the present, and while some information remains yet to be investigated, there is, at this time, no compelling evidence that proves that any American remains alive in captivity in Southeast Asia.[1]

With specific regard to the "some evidence", the committee said this: "But neither live-sighting reports nor other sources of intelligence have provided grounds for encouragement,[12] particularly over the past decade. The live-sighting reports that have been resolved have not checked out; alleged pictures of POWs have proven false; purported leads have come up empty; and photographic intelligence has been inconclusive, at best."[1] Two senators, Smith and Grassley, dissented at note 12, with the report saying "they believe that live-sighting reports and other sources of intelligence are evidence that POWs may have survived to the present."[1]

With regard to the possibility that American POWs survived in Southeast Asia after Operation Homecoming, the committee said this: "We acknowledge that there is no proof that U.S. POWs survived, but neither is there proof that all of those who did not return had died. There is evidence, moreover, that indicates the possibility of survival, at least for a small number, after Operation Homecoming."[1]

Committee vice-chairman Smith seemed to back away from the committee's findings within months of their being issued, appearing in April 1993 on Larry King Live with POW/MIA activist Bill Hendon,[62] stressing his partial dissent from the majority report and touting new evidence of North Vietnam having held back prisoners in 1973,[62] and then in the Senate in September 1993, saying he had "very compelling" new evidence of live prisoners.[44] He also asked the Justice Department to investigate ten federal officials for perjury and other crimes in conjunction with a cover-up of POW/MIA investigations,[44] In what he dubbed "Operation Clean Sweep", Smith said the targeted officials had a "mind-set to debunk".[63] Kerry and McCain both denounced Smith's actions, with McCain saying "In my dealings with these people, it is clear that mistakes may have been made in a very complex set of issues. But at no time was there any indication that they were giving anything but their most dedicated efforts. I frankly don't feel it's appropriate to publicly make these charges without public substantiation."[44] Defense Secretary Les Aspin said the charges were unwarranted.[63]

In 1994, journalist Sydney Schanberg, who had won a Pulitzer Prize in the 1970s for his New York Times reporting in Cambodia, wrote a long article for Penthouse magazine in which he said the committee had been dominated by a faction led by Kerry that "wanted to appear to be probing the prisoner issue energetically, but in fact, they never rocked official Washington's boat, nor did they lay open the 20 years of secrecy and untruths."[64] Schanberg stated that key committee staff had had too close a relationship with the Department of Defense, and that while other committee investigators were able to get evidence of men left behind into the full body of the report, the report's conclusions "were watered down and muddied to the point of meaninglessness."[64] He alleged that government officials never seriously investigated reports of live POWs due to fear of public outrage and damage to their reputations and careers if any had been found and that they were afraid of embarrassment and another hostage crisis similar to the Iran hostage crisis that had helped end the Carter administration. Kerry denied that the committee had engaged in any cover-up.[64]

The Kerry committee did little to soften the attitudes of those directly involved in the issue. To skeptics, "live prisoners" remained a conspiracy theory unsupported by motivation or evidence, and the foundation for a cottage industry of charlatans who preyed upon the hopes of the families of the missing. As two skeptics wrote in 1995, "The conspiracy myth surrounding the Americans who remained missing after Operation Homecoming in 1973 had evolved to baroque intricacy. By 1992, there were thousands of zealots—who believed with cultlike fervor that hundreds of American POWs had been deliberately and callously abandoned in Indochina after the war, that there was a vast conspiracy within the armed forces and the executive branch—spanning five administrations—to cover up all evidence of this betrayal, and that the governments of Communist Vietnam and Laos continued to hold an unspecified number of living American POWs, despite their adamant denials of this charge."[65] Believers continued to strongly reject such notions; as Schanberg wrote in 1994, "It is not conspiracy theory, not paranoid myth, not Rambo fantasy. It is only hard evidence of a national disgrace: American prisoners were left behind at the end of the Vietnam War. They were abandoned because six presidents and official Washington could not admit their guilty secret. They were forgotten because the press and most Americans turned away from all things that reminded them of Vietnam."[64]

Normalization with Vietnam edit

The actions of the committee were designed to allow for improved ties between the United States and Vietnam, for which the unresolved fate of U.S. MIAs had long been a sticking point.[66] By the mid-1990s, the belief by Americans from a few years earlier that live prisoners still existed had mostly passed; in the words of Time magazine, "most people seemed resigned to the idea that the fortunes of war are bound to leave a few mysteries."[67] In 1994 the Senate passed a resolution, sponsored by Kerry and McCain, that called for an end to the existing trade embargo against Vietnam; it was intended to pave the way for normalization.[68]

When President Bill Clinton lifted the trade embargo on February 3, 1994, he stated:

I have made the judgment that the best way to ensure cooperation from Vietnam and to continue getting the information Americans want on POWs and MIAs is to end the trade embargo. I've also decided to establish a liaison office in Vietnam to provide services for Americans there and help us to pursue a human rights dialogue with the Vietnamese government. I want to be clear; These actions do not constitute a normalization of our relationships. Before that happens, we must have more progress, more cooperation and more answers. Toward that end, this spring I will send another high-level U.S. delegation to Vietnam to continue the search for remains and for documents.

In response, newscaster and columnist Dan Rather wrote the following:

In an obvious attempt to blunt criticism, President Clinton actually characterized lifting the embargo as creating the best opportunity to get the true story of what happened to America's missing. This was especially ill-advised. Because it was obvious that lifting the embargo wasn't designed to resolve doubts about the fate of the missing. It was designed to make money. It was a trade initiative, plain and simple. The people least likely to mistake it for anything else were the families of America's missing.[69]

In 1995, President Bill Clinton normalized diplomatic relations with the country of Vietnam,[67] with McCain's and Kerry's visible support during the announcement giving Clinton, who came of age during Vietnam but did not serve in the military, some political cover.[67][70][71]

During his time on the committee and afterward, McCain was vilified as a fraud,[72] traitor,[70] or "Manchurian Candidate"[67] by many of the POW/MIA activists who believed in live prisoners. McCain's high-profile on the Vietnam issue also cost him the friendship of some fellow former POWs;[73] In return, McCain continued to attack those he saw as profiteers exploiting the families of those missing in action.[71]

In the 1990s, the Joint Task Force–Full Accounting in conjunction with the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command was established to focus on achieving the fullest possible accounting of Americans missing from the Vietnam War. It has interviewed thousands of witnesses regarding the fate of missing Americans,[5] and conducts ten missions per year in Southeast Asia to search for remains of those still listed as missing.

Diminished in impact but not gone edit

 
By the late 2000s, the Vietnam POW/MIA issue had largely faded from view, but the U.S. public still saw the POW/MIA Flag flying at many public facilities.

During the twenty-first century, the Vietnam POW/MIA issue became less in the public eye, but did not disappear. As one National Public Radio report said, "The POW/MIA movement isn't the cultural and political force that it once was, but it's still hard to ignore. The iconic black-and-white POW/MIA flag is seemingly everywhere ..."[74]

In a 2002 interview, the Cambodia politician Pen Sovan reported hearing about U.S. POWs from his guards, during his imprisonment in Vietnam, and believed that some had been taken by the Soviet Union. He said he had spoken to U.S. MIA officials about this.[75]

Schanberg returned to the POW/MIA subject during John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign in a series of articles for The Village Voice; he claimed that Kerry had shredded documents, suppressed testimony, and sanitized findings during his time as chairman of the committee.[76] Kerry denied these allegations and responded overall by saying, "In the end, I think what we can take pride in is that we put together the most significant, most thorough, most exhaustive accounting for missing and former POWs in the history of human warfare."[76]

In 2007, the former Congressman Bill Hendon published his book An Enormous Crime, which chronicled his view of the history of U.S. service members abandoned in Southeast Asia following the war and the circumstances that left them there.[77] A companion website allowed readers to examine actual intelligence reports and decide if the Defense Intelligence Agency acted properly in dismissing each case. The book ranked to #34 on the New York Times Best Seller list.[78]

A year later, Schanberg again published articles, this time for The Nation and The Nation Institute, during John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign, in which he recapped his previous arguments and additionally claimed that McCain had helped cover up the long suppression of evidence concerning live prisoners.[79] Former Congressman LeBoutillier was also vocal in his opposition to McCain, in part due to McCain's failure to acknowledge what he saw as evidence of live U.S. POWs left behind.[80] However, while the group of activists on the topic still felt very strongly about it, the matter had largely faded from the U.S. public, and McCain's actions with regard to the POW/MIA issue never were never mentioned as a serious factor in his eventually losing campaign.[81]

The controversy continued to pop up on occasion in the 2010s. The Canadian documentary Unclaimed told in 2013 the story of an elderly man in Vietnam claiming to be a U.S. soldier thought killed in action in 1968. However, Defense Department officials said the man was an imposter with a history of impersonating U.S. POWs.[82][83] The case of Baron 52, the call sign of a U.S. Air Force EC-47 carrying eight crew members that was shot down over Laos in 1973, was reopened for examination by the Air Force and the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency in 2016, after decades of pressure from family members who believe that four of the crewmen might have escaped the crash.[84]

Continued accounting edit

Efforts continue to recover Americans; the U.S. Department of Defense spends over $110 million per year in the effort, and the number unaccounted for gradually decreases.[74] For instance, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, the number of U.S. military and civilian personnel still unaccounted for from the Vietnam War was given as 1,621 as of March 23, 2016.[85] Then as of December 21, 2018, the number of U.S. military and civilian personnel still unaccounted for is 1,592.[86] By February 7, 2020, this number had been reduced a little further, to 1,587.[86]

Working jointly, U.S. and Vietnamese experts focus on "Last Known Alive" cases, which involve missing Americans whom the United States believed might have survived their initial loss incident. Outcomes of these investigations helps resolve the live prisoners question.

The United States has identified 296 individuals as Last Known Alive cases in all of Southeast Asia, and following full investigations, the Defense Department had confirmed the wartime death of 245 of these individuals by March 2012.[87]

One important result of the movement was that greater pressure was put by family members on the U.S. government towards recovering and identifying the missing from other past conflicts, some of which had seen far greater numbers of missing in action. Indeed, the majority of the some 150 new identifications made each year are from the Korean War or World War II. As historian Michael Allen has said, "This [pressure] result[ed] in renewed efforts to recover the missing from earlier conflicts, and that effort has over time become institutionalized, so that it's ongoing. It's just part of the military bureaucracy."[74]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Executive Summary". Report of the Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs. United States Senate. 1993-01-13. from the original on 2017-10-10. Retrieved 2008-01-03.
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  37. ^ O'Brien, Harvey (2012). Action Movies: The Cinema of Striking Back. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 46–49. O'Brien's discussion includes a still from the film of that scene.
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  82. ^ Adam, James (2013-09-20). "New release of Vietnam MIA doc Unclaimed nods to controversy". The Globe and Mail. from the original on 2016-01-26. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
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Further reading edit

  • Allen, Michael J. (2009). Until the Last Man Comes Home: POWs, MIAs, and the Unending Vietnam War. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

External links edit

  • Records of U.S. Military Casualties, Missing in Action, and Prisoners of War from the Era of the Vietnam War 2016-07-10 at the Wayback Machine at The National Archives
    • A Finding Aid to Records Relating to American Prisoners of War and Missing in Action from the Vietnam War Era, 1960–1994 (all congressional committees and hearings)
    • A Finding Aid to Records Relating to American Prisoners of War and Missing in Action from the Vietnam War Era, 1960–1994 (Kerry committee)
  • The Vietnam-Era Prisoner-of-War/Missing-in-Action Database at Library of Congress
  • Report of the Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs at Library of Congress (98Mb PDF)
    • Report of the Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs – Executive Summary only at Federation of American Scientists (HTML)
  • Blog covers Widow’s travels to Vietnam in search of her MIA husband’s jet crash site in Que Son Mtns
  • Video of C-SPAN special segment, Author Carol Jose speaks about book on the National League of Families
  • CBS News, "Woman Wears POW/MIA Bracelet for 40 years" News spot about a woman's dedication to a missing Vietnam War soldier and his family.
  • Vietnam War: P.O.W. / M.I.A. Songs

vietnam, issue, concerns, fate, united, states, servicemen, were, reported, missing, action, during, vietnam, associated, theaters, operation, southeast, asia, following, paris, peace, accords, 1973, prisoners, pows, were, returned, during, operation, homecomi. The Vietnam War POW MIA issue concerns the fate of United States servicemen who were reported as missing in action MIA during the Vietnam War and associated theaters of operation in Southeast Asia Following the Paris Peace Accords of 1973 591 U S prisoners of war POWs were returned during Operation Homecoming Many of those missing were airmen who were shot down over North Vietnam or Laos Investigations of these incidents have involved determining whether the men involved survived being shot down if they did not the U S government made efforts to recover their remains Progress in resolving these cases was slow until the mid 1980s when relations between the United States and Vietnam began to improve and more cooperative efforts were undertaken Normalization of the U S relations with Vietnam in the mid 1990s was a culmination of this process Considerable speculation and investigation have been devoted to a hypothesis that a significant number of missing U S service members from the Vietnam War were captured as prisoners of war by communist forces and kept as live prisoners after U S involvement in the war concluded in 1973 A vocal group of POW MIA activists has maintained that there has been a concerted conspiracy by the Vietnamese and U S governments since then to hide the existence of these prisoners The U S government has steadfastly denied that prisoners were left behind or that any effort has been made to cover up their existence Popular culture has reflected the live prisoners theory Several congressional investigations have looked into the issue culminating with the largest and most thorough the United States Senate Select Committee on POW MIA Affairs of 1991 93 which found no compelling evidence that proves that any American remains alive in captivity in Southeast Asia 1 Contents 1 Origins 2 POW MIA activist organizations 3 Recovery with rescue 4 Effect on popular culture 5 The live prisoners debate 6 Kerry committee 7 Normalization with Vietnam 8 Diminished in impact but not gone 9 Continued accounting 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksOrigins editMain article U S prisoners of war during the Vietnam War The origins of the POW MIA issue date back to during the war itself Suffering from a lack of accurate intelligence sources inside North Vietnam the United States never had solid knowledge for how many U S prisoners of war were held 2 Indeed the United States often relied upon possibly inaccurate North Vietnamese newspapers and radio broadcasts to find out who had been captured as well as memorized lists of names brought out by the few U S POWs given early release 2 As the Department of Defense built up lists of those in the categories of killed in action killed in action body not recovered prisoner of war and missing in action its tentative numbers fluctuated but most of the time the number of expected returnees upon war s end was around 600 3 However the Nixon administration had made return of the POW s one of its central arguments to the American public for prolonging the war and bringing North Vietnam to terms In doing so the administration stated the number of POW s at issue at one point stating that there were fifteen hundred American Servicemen held throughout Southeast Asia 3 These higher numbers would be the focus of much of the controversy in the issue to come 3 Following the Paris Peace Accords of January 1973 U S prisoners of war were returned during Operation Homecoming during February through April 1973 During this 591 POWs were released to U S authorities this included a few captured in Laos and released in North Vietnam U S President Richard Nixon announced that all U S Servicemen taken prisoner had been accounted for 4 At that time the United States listed 2 646 Americans as unaccounted for 5 including about 1 350 prisoners of war or missing in action and roughly 1 200 reported killed in action and body not recovered 6 The low numbers of returnees from Laos caused some immediate concern as previous Pentagon estimates were as high as 41 for prisoners held there although only a few had been known to be captured for certain 7 By late 1973 the remains of over 700 Americans killed in Southeast Asia had been returned and identified 8 Investigation of the fate of all the missing service personnel would end up residing with the Defense Prisoner of War Missing Personnel Office The Joint POW MIA Accounting Command also played a major role in subsequent investigations In 1973 the Defense Department established the Central Identification Laboratory Thailand to coordinate POW MIA recovery efforts in Southeast Asia 9 10 The United States conducted some limited operations in South Vietnam in 1974 to find the remains of those missing and pursuant to the Paris Accords the North Vietnamese returned some remains too These efforts halted following the collapse of the Accords and the fall of South Vietnam in 1975 and over the next ten years little progress was made in recovering remains 5 During the late 1970s and 1980s the friends and relatives of unaccounted for U S personnel became politically active requesting the United States government reveal what steps were taken to follow up on intelligence regarding last known alive MIAs and POWs When initial inquiries revealed important information had not been pursued many families and their supporters asked for the public release of POW MIA records and called for an investigation citation needed U S Private First Class Robert R Garwood is often cited as the last U S POW from the Vietnam War In 1979 Garwood reemerged claiming he and other POWs had remained imprisoned after the war 11 In a court martial shortly after his return he was found not guilty of desertion solicitation of U S troops in the field to refuse to fight and to defect and maltreatment However he was convicted on February 5 1981 of communicating with the enemy and of the assault on a U S prisoner of war interned in a POW camp 12 Later independent investigations found no substantial evidence to support Garwood s claims and a Department of Defense investigation published in 1993 concluded Garwood was a collaborator with the enemy 11 A subsequent 1993 investigation conducted directly by Senator Bob Smith claimed to have found the building where Garwood was imprisoned but the building s connection to Garwood is disputed 13 POW MIA activist organizations edit nbsp The National League of Families POW MIA flag it was created in 1971 when the war was still in progress The National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia was created by Sybil Stockdale Evelyn Grubb and Mary Crowe as an originally small group of POW MIA wives in Coronado California and Hampton Roads Virginia in 1967 14 15 Sybil Stockdale s husband Navy Commander James Stockdale was shot down in 1965 and she was determined to make the American people aware of the mistreatment of U S POW s This publicity resulted in better treatment of U S POW s from fall 1969 on After the war the National League of Families became the leading group requesting information about those still listed as missing in action It was led by Ann Mills Griffiths Its stated mission was and is to obtain the release of all prisoners the fullest possible accounting for the missing and repatriation of all recoverable remains of those who died serving our nation during the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia The League s most prominent symbol is its POW MIA flag Newt Heisley designed this flag to represent America s missing men 16 This group was more established less radical and more connected to the government 17 The National Alliance of Families For the Return of America s Missing Servicemen was founded in 1990 Its goal was and is to resolve the fates of any unreturned U S prisoners of war or missing in action from World War II on forward not just Southeast Asia and to gain the return of any live prisoners It is a 1980 s origined splinter from the National League of Families 18 created by members who were dissatisfied with Ann Mills Griffiths leadership 18 Compared to the older group the National Alliance took a more activist radical stance especially towards belief in the existence of live prisoners in Southeast Asia 17 The chair and co founder of the group is Dolores Apodaca Alfond whose brother Major Victor Joe Apodaca Jr was shot down in 1967 during the Vietnam War 19 The group was visible during the Kerry Committee hearings of the early 1990s 19 but disagreed with the committee s findings that there was no compelling evidence of any live prisoners in Southeast Asia 20 Businessman and POW MIA advocate Ross Perot who had done much to help POW families during the war 21 22 was also very active on this issue Recovery with rescue editFrom the perspective of the Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency s history of the issue by the late 1980s the United States and Vietnam increased the frequency of high level policy and technical meetings to help resolve the POW MIA matter The Vietnamese began allow U S government search parties to operate within the country The Laotian government also agreed to joint crash site excavations in the late 1980s In Cambodia similar joint efforts began in the early 1990 s By 1992 major joint field operations were taking place in all three countries operations that would carry on for years to come 23 A number of individuals were not satisfied with or did not trust U S government actions in this area and took their own initiative Retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jack E Bailey created Operation Rescue which featured a former freighter and smuggling boat named the S S Akuna and solicited funds from POW MIA groups 24 25 While Bailey did pick up some Vietnamese refugees 24 he never produced any prisoners and the boat spent years never leaving its dock in Songkhla in Thailand 25 The effort did however prove adept at bringing in money through the Virginia based Eberle Associates direct mail marketing firm 25 24 Financial reports indicated that Operation Rescue spent 89 percent of the funds it raised on further fundraising 25 During the 1980 s former United States Army Special Forces member Bo Gritz undertook a series of private trips into Southeast Asia purportedly to locate U S POW s whom some believed were still being held by Laos and Vietnam for example at location Nhommarath These missions were heavily publicized and controversial for instance as some commentators stated few successful secret missions involve bringing to the border towns females openly marketing commemorative POW rescue T shirts 26 27 One such mission in 1982 was to free POW s reported to be in Laos Gritz led 15 Laotians and 3 Americans but they were ambushed shortly after crossing the border from Vietnam to Laos and the mission failed 28 Command Sergeant Major Eric L Haney a former Delta Force commando and a holder of the live prisoners belief later wrote that beginning in 1981 his unit was twice told to prepare for a mission involving the rescue of U S POW s being held by the North Vietnamese in camps in Laos but both times the missions were scrubbed for reasons unclear 29 30 Haney later said that years later he met a former senior member of the North Vietnamese diplomatic corps who asked him why the U S never tried getting their POW s back after the war s end 29 Regarding a Laos mission Lieutenant General William G Jerry Boykin a former Commander of Delta Force briefly mentions in his 2008 memoir that at one time Delta Force had been engaged in planning for a mission to infiltrate Laos to search for American MIA s but that the idea like several unrelated missions that Delta Force had considered during its early years had not gone forward due to the White House thinking it too risky a venture 31 Another figure of the 1980 s was Scott Barnes who claimed he had both been in a secret operation in Cambodia and had seen an American POW 32 His actions caused significant dissension among POW MIA activists especially once he claimed that he had seen more American POW s in Laos but had been ordered by the Central Intelligence Agency to assassinate them 32 33 He published the 1987 book BOHICA that related this story 33 The National League of Families ended up accusing him of exploiting the MIA issue for personal gain as one wife had mortgaged her house to fund him 32 Barnes who had concocted much of his purported military background would subsequently become a controversial figure within Ross Perot s 1992 presidential campaign 34 A former American POW Eugene Red McDaniel also became convinced that American prisoners had been left behind and became active in the issue during the 1980s and early 1990s 35 Effect on popular culture editIn the words of one analysis The notion that the United States may have left men behind was hard to fathom and Americans chose to partly solve this complex problem through fictional characters 28 This was especially true in Hollywood films The first was Chuck Norris s 1978 Good Guys Wear Black which postulated a cynical U S government writing off MIAs with a bogus mission 28 1983 s Uncommon Valor starring Gene Hackman followed suit as did Norris again in 1984 with Missing in Action The most visible film in this theme was Sylvester Stallone s Rambo First Blood Part II in 1985 which did the most to popularize the idea that U S POWs had been left behind after the war and that the government had no real interest in their rescue 28 The Rambo character who in this film may have been partly modeled after Bo Gritz 36 was a Vietnam veteran commando still haunted by the multiple failures of the war The pivotal moment of the film occurs when Rambo realizing he was betrayed by the U S government and under torture from the Vietnamese and their Soviet allies is put into radio communication with the officer who ordered the mission and tells him Murdock I m coming to get you 37 38 Rambo and the Norris films were commercially successful in both the United States and in Thailand and other parts of Southeast Asia and did much to perpetuate the stock image of American prisoners held in bamboo cages 39 Rambo was followed by Norris s 1985 prequel Missing in Action 2 The Beginning as well as other films such as P O W The Escape 1986 and Dog Tags 1990 that shared similar conceits 28 The Vietnam war POW MIA issue was also explored in some U S television series The long running series Magnum P I included multiple episodes in the mid late 1980s whose central theme was the possibility of U S POWs remaining in Vietnam 40 The 1997 The X Files episode Unrequited also dealt with this notion The POW MIA issue was also part of a key story line in the series JAG in the late 1990s where the father of central character Harmon Rabb had been an MIA in Vietnam During the second third and fourth seasons evidence gradually mounted that Harm Sr had been relocated to the Soviet Union where he had later escaped and been killed by Soviet soldiers in Siberia 41 Many Vietnam War songs released in the United States dealt with various aspects of the POW experience with over 140 such songs identified by the Vietnam War Song Project Many were obscure and never reached a popular audience or achieved commercial success In the early to mid 1970s they largely looked at welcoming the prisoners home and the impact of the war on veterans and their families The only one to become a hit was Merle Haggard s 1972 number one country single I Wonder If They Ever Think of Me In the 1980s some POW MIA songs took a similar approach to American Vietnam War films which suggested that many hundreds of U S prisoners remained in Vietnam and that the U S government had abandoned them 42 The live prisoners debate editSeveral committee investigations within the U S Congress took place over the years 43 Some members of Congress were quite active on the issue For Vietnam veteran Bob Smith Representative and later Senator from New Hampshire the fate of possible missing or captured Americans in Vietnam had been Smith s major issue since his arrival in Congress in 1985 44 His interest was partly motivated by his own experience growing up without knowing how his own father died in World War II 44 North Carolina Congressman Bill Hendon who served two terms in the early mid 1980s was also quite active on the issue He and Smith met with President Ronald Reagan in January 1986 to discuss their belief that Vietnam was still holding U S prisoners and that U S intelligence agencies knew this but that the bureaucracy within the agencies was covering it up from even the Secretary of Defense 45 Reagan termed Hendon way out yonder on the issue and after Vice President George H W Bush reported that even Smith would not agree with Hendon on some of these claims Reagan concluded that Bill is off his rocker 45 New York Congressman John LeBoutillier who served one term in the early 1980s became interested in politics due to POW matters After leaving Congress he continued to be active in POW MIA affairs He founded the Sky Hook II Project dedicated to recovering living U S POWs in Southeast Asia He has made frequent trips to Laos and Vietnam and also met with Laotian and Vietnamese leaders in Hanoi Ho Chi Minh City Jakarta Vientiane and western cities Another political figure active in the POW MIA issue was Tom Walsh who became mayor of Casper Wyoming and a member of the Wyoming House of Representatives who made trips to Southeast Asia to search for information on POWs and MIAs 46 The POW MIA issue heated up in the early 1990s Serious charges were leveled at the Bush administration 1989 to 1993 regarding the POW MIA issue 47 The United States Department of Defense headed by Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney was accused of covering up information and failing to properly pursue intelligence about U S POW MIAs 48 Ranking minority member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina became interested in the matter In October 1990 his chief staff aide James P Lucier prepared a report stating that it was probable there were live POWs still being held and that the Bush administration was complicit in hiding the facts 49 The report also alleged that the Soviet Union had held U S prisoners after the end of World War II and more may have been transferred there during the Korean War and the Vietnam War 49 Helms stated that the deeper story was a possible deliberate effort by certain people in the government to disregard all information or reports about living MIA POWs 49 This allegation was followed in May 1991 by Helms release of a minority report of the Foreign Relations Committee entitled An Examination of US Policy Toward POW MIAs which made similar claims and concluded that any evidence that suggested an MIA might be alive was uniformly and arbitrarily rejected 50 The issuance of the report angered other Republicans on the committee and after charges were made that the report contained errors innuendo and unsubstantiated rumors Helms distanced himself from the POW MIA issue 49 This and other personnel matters led to Helms firing Lucier in January 1992 51 A July 1991 Newsweek cover photograph purported to show three U S POWs still being held against their will which increased general public interest in the issue 52 However the photograph turned out to be a hoax 52 Polls showed that a majority of Americans believed live POWs were indeed still being held captive 53 a July 1991 Wall Street Journal poll showed 70 percent of Americans believing this and that three fourths of them believed the U S government was not doing what needed to be done to gain their release 54 Interest in the matter intensified in June 1992 when President of the Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin told NBC News in an interview that some Americans captured during the Vietnam War may have been transferred from Hanoi to the Soviet Union Our archives have shown that it is true some of them were transferred to the territory of the former U S S R and were kept in labor camps We don t have complete data and can only surmise that some of them may still be alive 19 Ross Perot stated that he believed that hundreds of U S servicemen were left behind in Southeast Asia at the end of the U S involvement in the war 55 and that government officials were covering up POW MIA investigations in order to not reveal a drug smuggling operation used to finance a secret war in Laos 56 Retired United States Army general former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and head of the U S POW MIA delegation in Hanoi John Vessey 57 defended administrations and the military s role in trying to get the Vietnamese to improve their efforts in ascertaining the fate of missing U S personnel 57 Vessey had succeeded in 1988 in convincing the Vietnamese to permit U S search teams to operate throughout the country 5 Vessey categorically rejected the notion of a government conspiracy saying that he had never seen evidence of one at any time in his military career and adding that American soldiers sailors airmen and marines are not conspirators 58 United States Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney said that Vietnamese cooperation was improved but still needed much more improvement 59 For critics and skeptics the allegations failed to convincingly answer the question as to what reason the Vietnamese and other neighboring countries would have to keep living prisoners They could have been returned post war or being inconvenient witnesses simply executed Proponents of the theory often claimed that the prisoners were initially held back as part of a scheme to gain war reparations from the United States as cheap labor or both 60 after the U S refused to pay reparations they then continued to be held so that the Vietnamese wanting to be accepted and taken seriously by the international community would not have to admit to what they had done Kerry committee editMain article United States Senate Select Committee on POW MIA Affairs Senator Bob Smith introduced a 1991 resolution to create a Senate Select POW MIA Committee 43 Senator and fellow Vietnam War veteran John Kerry was the chair of the committee and its third key member was Senator and former Vietnam War POW John McCain Compared to earlier congressional investigations into the POW MIA issue this one had a mandate to be more skeptical and ask harder questions of government officials than before 43 The committee s work included more visits to Vietnam and getting the Department of Defense to declassify over a million pages of relevant documents 61 Kerry and McCain said that they had gotten the Vietnamese to give them full access to their records and that they had spent thousands of hours trying to find real not fabricated evidence of surviving Americans 61 Some of the most publicized testimony before the committee came in September 1992 when former Nixon Defense Secretaries Melvin Laird and James Schlesinger said that the U S government had believed in 1973 that some U S servicemen had not been returned from Laos despite Nixon s public statements to the contrary 4 Schlesinger said As of now I can come to no other conclusion But that does not mean there are any alive today 4 Laird said in retrospect of Nixon s assurances that all POWs were coming home I think it was unfortunate to be that positive You can t be that positive when we had the kind of intelligence we had 4 In reaction to the testimony Kerry said I think it s quite extraordinary when two former secretaries of defense both give evidence documenting that they had information or they believed personally that people were alive and not accounted for in Operation Homecoming 4 The committee issued its unanimous findings on January 13 1993 In response to the central question of whether any U S POWs were still in captivity it stated While the Committee has some evidence suggesting the possibility a POW may have survived to the present and while some information remains yet to be investigated there is at this time no compelling evidence that proves that any American remains alive in captivity in Southeast Asia 1 With specific regard to the some evidence the committee said this But neither live sighting reports nor other sources of intelligence have provided grounds for encouragement 12 particularly over the past decade The live sighting reports that have been resolved have not checked out alleged pictures of POWs have proven false purported leads have come up empty and photographic intelligence has been inconclusive at best 1 Two senators Smith and Grassley dissented at note 12 with the report saying they believe that live sighting reports and other sources of intelligence are evidence that POWs may have survived to the present 1 With regard to the possibility that American POWs survived in Southeast Asia after Operation Homecoming the committee said this We acknowledge that there is no proof that U S POWs survived but neither is there proof that all of those who did not return had died There is evidence moreover that indicates the possibility of survival at least for a small number after Operation Homecoming 1 Committee vice chairman Smith seemed to back away from the committee s findings within months of their being issued appearing in April 1993 on Larry King Live with POW MIA activist Bill Hendon 62 stressing his partial dissent from the majority report and touting new evidence of North Vietnam having held back prisoners in 1973 62 and then in the Senate in September 1993 saying he had very compelling new evidence of live prisoners 44 He also asked the Justice Department to investigate ten federal officials for perjury and other crimes in conjunction with a cover up of POW MIA investigations 44 In what he dubbed Operation Clean Sweep Smith said the targeted officials had a mind set to debunk 63 Kerry and McCain both denounced Smith s actions with McCain saying In my dealings with these people it is clear that mistakes may have been made in a very complex set of issues But at no time was there any indication that they were giving anything but their most dedicated efforts I frankly don t feel it s appropriate to publicly make these charges without public substantiation 44 Defense Secretary Les Aspin said the charges were unwarranted 63 In 1994 journalist Sydney Schanberg who had won a Pulitzer Prize in the 1970s for his New York Times reporting in Cambodia wrote a long article for Penthouse magazine in which he said the committee had been dominated by a faction led by Kerry that wanted to appear to be probing the prisoner issue energetically but in fact they never rocked official Washington s boat nor did they lay open the 20 years of secrecy and untruths 64 Schanberg stated that key committee staff had had too close a relationship with the Department of Defense and that while other committee investigators were able to get evidence of men left behind into the full body of the report the report s conclusions were watered down and muddied to the point of meaninglessness 64 He alleged that government officials never seriously investigated reports of live POWs due to fear of public outrage and damage to their reputations and careers if any had been found and that they were afraid of embarrassment and another hostage crisis similar to the Iran hostage crisis that had helped end the Carter administration Kerry denied that the committee had engaged in any cover up 64 The Kerry committee did little to soften the attitudes of those directly involved in the issue To skeptics live prisoners remained a conspiracy theory unsupported by motivation or evidence and the foundation for a cottage industry of charlatans who preyed upon the hopes of the families of the missing As two skeptics wrote in 1995 The conspiracy myth surrounding the Americans who remained missing after Operation Homecoming in 1973 had evolved to baroque intricacy By 1992 there were thousands of zealots who believed with cultlike fervor that hundreds of American POWs had been deliberately and callously abandoned in Indochina after the war that there was a vast conspiracy within the armed forces and the executive branch spanning five administrations to cover up all evidence of this betrayal and that the governments of Communist Vietnam and Laos continued to hold an unspecified number of living American POWs despite their adamant denials of this charge 65 Believers continued to strongly reject such notions as Schanberg wrote in 1994 It is not conspiracy theory not paranoid myth not Rambo fantasy It is only hard evidence of a national disgrace American prisoners were left behind at the end of the Vietnam War They were abandoned because six presidents and official Washington could not admit their guilty secret They were forgotten because the press and most Americans turned away from all things that reminded them of Vietnam 64 Normalization with Vietnam editThe actions of the committee were designed to allow for improved ties between the United States and Vietnam for which the unresolved fate of U S MIAs had long been a sticking point 66 By the mid 1990s the belief by Americans from a few years earlier that live prisoners still existed had mostly passed in the words of Time magazine most people seemed resigned to the idea that the fortunes of war are bound to leave a few mysteries 67 In 1994 the Senate passed a resolution sponsored by Kerry and McCain that called for an end to the existing trade embargo against Vietnam it was intended to pave the way for normalization 68 When President Bill Clinton lifted the trade embargo on February 3 1994 he stated I have made the judgment that the best way to ensure cooperation from Vietnam and to continue getting the information Americans want on POWs and MIAs is to end the trade embargo I ve also decided to establish a liaison office in Vietnam to provide services for Americans there and help us to pursue a human rights dialogue with the Vietnamese government I want to be clear These actions do not constitute a normalization of our relationships Before that happens we must have more progress more cooperation and more answers Toward that end this spring I will send another high level U S delegation to Vietnam to continue the search for remains and for documents In response newscaster and columnist Dan Rather wrote the following In an obvious attempt to blunt criticism President Clinton actually characterized lifting the embargo as creating the best opportunity to get the true story of what happened to America s missing This was especially ill advised Because it was obvious that lifting the embargo wasn t designed to resolve doubts about the fate of the missing It was designed to make money It was a trade initiative plain and simple The people least likely to mistake it for anything else were the families of America s missing 69 In 1995 President Bill Clinton normalized diplomatic relations with the country of Vietnam 67 with McCain s and Kerry s visible support during the announcement giving Clinton who came of age during Vietnam but did not serve in the military some political cover 67 70 71 During his time on the committee and afterward McCain was vilified as a fraud 72 traitor 70 or Manchurian Candidate 67 by many of the POW MIA activists who believed in live prisoners McCain s high profile on the Vietnam issue also cost him the friendship of some fellow former POWs 73 In return McCain continued to attack those he saw as profiteers exploiting the families of those missing in action 71 In the 1990s the Joint Task Force Full Accounting in conjunction with the Joint POW MIA Accounting Command was established to focus on achieving the fullest possible accounting of Americans missing from the Vietnam War It has interviewed thousands of witnesses regarding the fate of missing Americans 5 and conducts ten missions per year in Southeast Asia to search for remains of those still listed as missing Diminished in impact but not gone edit nbsp By the late 2000s the Vietnam POW MIA issue had largely faded from view but the U S public still saw the POW MIA Flag flying at many public facilities During the twenty first century the Vietnam POW MIA issue became less in the public eye but did not disappear As one National Public Radio report said The POW MIA movement isn t the cultural and political force that it once was but it s still hard to ignore The iconic black and white POW MIA flag is seemingly everywhere 74 In a 2002 interview the Cambodia politician Pen Sovan reported hearing about U S POWs from his guards during his imprisonment in Vietnam and believed that some had been taken by the Soviet Union He said he had spoken to U S MIA officials about this 75 Schanberg returned to the POW MIA subject during John Kerry s 2004 presidential campaign in a series of articles for The Village Voice he claimed that Kerry had shredded documents suppressed testimony and sanitized findings during his time as chairman of the committee 76 Kerry denied these allegations and responded overall by saying In the end I think what we can take pride in is that we put together the most significant most thorough most exhaustive accounting for missing and former POWs in the history of human warfare 76 In 2007 the former Congressman Bill Hendon published his book An Enormous Crime which chronicled his view of the history of U S service members abandoned in Southeast Asia following the war and the circumstances that left them there 77 A companion website allowed readers to examine actual intelligence reports and decide if the Defense Intelligence Agency acted properly in dismissing each case The book ranked to 34 on the New York Times Best Seller list 78 A year later Schanberg again published articles this time for The Nation and The Nation Institute during John McCain s 2008 presidential campaign in which he recapped his previous arguments and additionally claimed that McCain had helped cover up the long suppression of evidence concerning live prisoners 79 Former Congressman LeBoutillier was also vocal in his opposition to McCain in part due to McCain s failure to acknowledge what he saw as evidence of live U S POWs left behind 80 However while the group of activists on the topic still felt very strongly about it the matter had largely faded from the U S public and McCain s actions with regard to the POW MIA issue never were never mentioned as a serious factor in his eventually losing campaign 81 The controversy continued to pop up on occasion in the 2010s The Canadian documentary Unclaimed told in 2013 the story of an elderly man in Vietnam claiming to be a U S soldier thought killed in action in 1968 However Defense Department officials said the man was an imposter with a history of impersonating U S POWs 82 83 The case of Baron 52 the call sign of a U S Air Force EC 47 carrying eight crew members that was shot down over Laos in 1973 was reopened for examination by the Air Force and the Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency in 2016 after decades of pressure from family members who believe that four of the crewmen might have escaped the crash 84 Continued accounting editEfforts continue to recover Americans the U S Department of Defense spends over 110 million per year in the effort and the number unaccounted for gradually decreases 74 For instance according to the Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency the number of U S military and civilian personnel still unaccounted for from the Vietnam War was given as 1 621 as of March 23 2016 85 Then as of December 21 2018 the number of U S military and civilian personnel still unaccounted for is 1 592 86 By February 7 2020 this number had been reduced a little further to 1 587 86 Working jointly U S and Vietnamese experts focus on Last Known Alive cases which involve missing Americans whom the United States believed might have survived their initial loss incident Outcomes of these investigations helps resolve the live prisoners question The United States has identified 296 individuals as Last Known Alive cases in all of Southeast Asia and following full investigations the Defense Department had confirmed the wartime death of 245 of these individuals by March 2012 87 One important result of the movement was that greater pressure was put by family members on the U S government towards recovering and identifying the missing from other past conflicts some of which had seen far greater numbers of missing in action Indeed the majority of the some 150 new identifications made each year are from the Korean War or World War II As historian Michael Allen has said This pressure result ed in renewed efforts to recover the missing from earlier conflicts and that effort has over time become institutionalized so that it s ongoing It s just part of the military bureaucracy 74 See also editList of United States servicemembers and civilians missing in action during the Vietnam War 1961 65 List of United States servicemembers and civilians missing in action during the Vietnam War 1966 67 List of United States servicemembers and civilians missing in action during the Vietnam War 1968 69 List of United States servicemembers and civilians missing in action during the Vietnam War 1970 71 List of United States servicemembers and civilians missing in action during the Vietnam War 1972 75 References edit a b c d e Executive Summary Report of the Select Committee on POW MIA Affairs United States Senate 1993 01 13 Archived from the original on 2017 10 10 Retrieved 2008 01 03 a b McConnell Malcolm Schweitzer III Theodore G 1995 Inside Hanoi s Secret Archives Solving the MIA Mystery Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 87118 5 pp 32 33 a b c McConnell and Schweitzer Inside Hanoi s Secret Archives p 31 a b c d e William J Eaton 1992 09 22 Nixon Defense Secretaries Say U S Left POWs in Vietnam Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2012 05 31 Retrieved 2008 01 25 a b c d Vietnam War Accounting History Defense Prisoner of War Missing Personnel Office Archived from the original on 2014 02 23 Retrieved 2014 03 10 Vietnam War Accounting History Defense Prisoner of War Missing Personnel Office Archived from the original on 2008 11 17 Retrieved 2008 11 22 McConnell and Schweitzer Inside Hanoi s Secret Archives p 42 Personnel Recovery and Accounting POW MIA Accounting Defense POW Missing Personnel Office 2004 Accessed November 2019 CINCPAC Command History 1973 17 September 2012 pp 214 25 Archived from the original on 9 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain CINCPAC Command History 1974 PDF Commander in Chief Pacific 25 September 1975 pp 209 15 Archived PDF from the original on 14 May 2019 Retrieved 14 May 2019 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b Defense Intelligence Agency June 1993 The Case of Pvt Robert R Garwood USMC PDF U S Department of 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stirring up a McCain mutiny New York Daily News p 20 via Newspapers com See for example Mason Jeff November 5 2008 Why John McCain lost the White House Reuters Retrieved 2019 07 07 Analysis Turning points led to McCain s defeat CNN November 5 2008 Retrieved 2019 07 07 Why Did John McCain Lose Real Clear Politics Creators Syndicate November 7 2008 Retrieved 2019 07 07 Hall John 2013 05 01 Revealed Man claiming to be Vietnam veteran Sgt John Hartley Robertson who went missing and was presumed dead 44 years earlier is exposed as a fraud The Independent Archived from the original on 2014 01 10 Retrieved 2013 12 21 Adam James 2013 09 20 New release of Vietnam MIA doc Unclaimed nods to controversy The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on 2016 01 26 Retrieved 2013 12 21 Tritten Travis J April 11 2016 Vietnam War airman s death re examined after decades of controversy Stars and Stripes Archived from the original on April 16 2016 Retrieved April 23 2016 Airman Missing From Vietnam War Accounted For PDF Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 22 Retrieved 2016 03 23 a b Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency gt Our Missing gt Past Conflicts www dpaa mil Archived from the original on 2018 12 25 Retrieved 2018 12 25 Visited again 2020 02 08 Last Known Alive LKA Cases In Southeast Asia PDF Defense Prisoner of War Missing Personnel Office Archived from the original PDF on 2014 06 10 Retrieved 2014 03 10 Further reading editAllen Michael J 2009 Until the Last Man Comes Home POWs MIAs and the Unending Vietnam War Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press External links editRecords of U S Military Casualties Missing in Action and Prisoners of War from the Era of the Vietnam War Archived 2016 07 10 at the Wayback Machine at The National Archives A Finding Aid to Records Relating to American Prisoners of War and Missing in Action from the Vietnam War Era 1960 1994 all congressional committees and hearings A Finding Aid to Records Relating to American Prisoners of War and Missing in Action from the Vietnam War Era 1960 1994 Kerry committee The Vietnam Era Prisoner of War Missing in Action Database at Library of Congress Report of the Select Committee on POW MIA Affairs at Library of Congress 98Mb PDF Report of the Select Committee on POW MIA Affairs Executive Summary only at Federation of American Scientists HTML Blog covers Widow s travels to Vietnam in search of her MIA husband s jet crash site in Que Son Mtns MIA Facts Site Joe Schlatter Colonel U S Army Retired Bill Hendon An Enormous Crime companion website Video of C SPAN special segment Author Carol Jose speaks about book on the National League of Families CBS News Woman Wears POW MIA Bracelet for 40 years News spot about a woman s dedication to a missing Vietnam War soldier and his family Vietnam War P O W M I A Songs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vietnam War POW MIA issue amp oldid 1219666043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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