New Mythology
and
Same Old Stuff
Summary. There are stories, claims, and reports related to the
MIA issue that surface again and again. They take various forms, deal with a number
of topics, and some of them have taken on the stature of near-gospel. On the
other hand, from time to time, new tales are invented (the JFK, Jr. crash expense is one
such new invention). The purpose of this article is to accumulate in one place these
commonly repeated or newly-introduced tales and comment on them. In some
cases, I have placed a link to an article that provides more detail about the matter under
discussion. These are listed here in no particular order and I will add new items as
they pop up.
Here is a listing of what you will find on this page.
"The government spent more to recover JFK, Jr.'s body than it
is spending to recover missing men from Vietnam"
The short answer to this claim is: nonsense.
The long answer is: see short answer.
In an attempt to reach the fullest possible accounting of missing from SEAsia, the
US government has been and continues to conduct an effort unparalleled in the entire
history of warfare. Close to 500 US personnel, military and civilian, are dedicated
to the effort. These include:
- Defense POW-Missing Personnel Office.
Located in Washington, DC, this office of close to 150 people provides analysis of
reporting and information, public information, and contacts with families.
- Joint Task Force - Full Accounting. Located in Hawaii.
Approximately 150 military personnel assigned, commanded by an Army brigadier
general. JTF-FA teams go into Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia to search for aircraft
crash sites and gravesites. Once found, they work under the direction of
anthropologists from the Army's Central Identification Laboratory to excavate and recover
remains and material that will help determine what happened to the men involved in each
loss incident.
- Defense Intelligence Agency STONY BEACH teams. These folks are
intelligence analysts and operators whose job is to interview people who claim to have
information on missing Americans and to conduct other intelligence operations aimed at
locating information on missing Americans.
- Central Identification Laboratory - Hawaii. CILHI is an Army
organization staffed by active duty military and civilians, including forensic
anthropologists. Their job is to direct excavations of loss sites, recover remains,
and identify those remains. Most of CILHI's work involves identifications from
Vietnam but they also work on current identifications (CILHI identified the crew of the
space shuttle Challenger)as well as identifications from WW II and Korea.
Related articles are:
I encourage you to visit the DPMO website and read through their archives of press
releases and announcements. There you will see the extent of the effort, especially
if you look carefully at the announcements of JTF-FA team deployments into SEAsia.
Why, then, are we now hearing the claim that "the government spent more on
recovering JFK, Jr. than it is spending on recovering our missing men from Vietnam?"
Simple. The MIA "activists" have for years seen their position
slipping away -- their claims are regularly proven to be without merit and, as remains are
recovered and identified, the men whom they claim are still POWs are being found in their
crash sites. So, they have to start something else -- it's just a weak attempt to
keep the pot stirred.
Returned POWs are not allowed to read their own debriefings
Not true.
When US POWs returned from Vietnam, they were debriefed as to their experiences.
Some of these debriefings were fairly simple, as in the case of men who were held only a
short time, others were detailed with follow-ups going on for years.
In each case, men were promised confidentiality. Essentially, they were told that
their debriefs would remain classified and would not be made available to anyone outside
carefully controlled official channels. Why such a pledge? Because individuals
may have revealed information that was personally embarrassing or sensitive to themselves
or to another person. The Department of Defense wanted returnees to speak freely
without fear of repercussions. DoD needed details of the facts of imprisonment and
of an individual's reaction and behavior so that information could be analyzed and used to
prepare future servicemembers for captivity.
The pledge of confidentiality remains inviolate today with two exceptions.
1. If a returnee had any information about a man who is still
missing, that information was provided to the missing man's next of kin.
2. Returnees are permitted to read their own
debriefings. They cannot make copies or make notes.
During my tenure at DIA and DPMO, a few returnees came to our office to read their
debriefs. They did this to refresh their memories in preparation for writing their
memoirs, giving an interview, or making a speech. Some just wanted to read what they
had to say.
The claim that returnees cannot see their own debriefs is not true.
The French paid millions of dollars in ransom for the return of
POWs from the French-Indochina War.
Not true.
The French pulled out of Vietnam and granted independence from the French colonial
empire to the Indochinese states of Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia following a series of
military defeats at the hands of the Viet Minh. The most famous of these defeats was
the collapse of the French garrison at Dien Bien Phu in May 1954. During their wars
in Indochina, the French suffered many casualties and most French dead were buried in
Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia. Because most of the fighting took place in Vietnam, that
is where most French casualties occurred.
The French established military cemeteries in Vietnam, similar to those established by
the US after WW II in Europe and the Pacific. Over 25,000 French soldiers were
buried in these cemeteries. These men were not unknown or missing and they certainly
were not prisoners of war. These French military cemeteries were just as though our
Arlington National Cemetery were located outside of Saigon -- the French government knew
who was buried there and the men's families knew. The French and Vietnamese had an
agreement whereby the Vietnamese would maintain the cemeteries and the French would pay
them for maintenance. As time went on, the maintenance of these cemeteries became
spotty, in some cases almost non-existent.
In the late 1980s, the French and Vietnamese opened discussions regarding these
cemeteries. The Vietnamese wanted the French dead out of Vietnam -- they needed the
land and they wanted the reminders of French colonialism off their territory. The
French wanted their dead back on French soil. Finally, a deal was struck and over
the course of a couple of years, the French exhumed the remains from these cemeteries and
returned them to France.
The French stated that they had, over the years, paid several million dollars for
maintenance on these cemeteries. It is this fact that certain MIA
"activists" have misrepresented, claiming that the French paid ransom for POWs
and MIAs to be returned to France.
In the early 1970s, a group of former French soldiers -- I believe the number was
40 or 41 -- returned to France from Vietnam. These men were not POWs. They
were deserters who had been living in Vietnam, freely and openly. They were known to
the French government and many of them had maintained contact with their families.
This situation is misrepresented by the MIA "activists" as being a group
of French POWs returned in the early 1970s.
This page was created on November 10, 1999 and
last modified on July 15, 2016
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