Sort of makes you wonder if there are still any POW's alive over there...Vietnam War MIAs identified
9/30/2003 - WASHINGTON (AFPN) -- The remains of four servicemen missing in action from the Vietnam War have been identified and are being returned to their families for burial with full military honors, defense officials announced Sept. 29.
Three are airmen, and one is a Coast Guardsman. They are Staff Sgt. Elmer L. Holden from Oklahoma City; Sgt. James D. Locker from Sidney, Ohio; Capt. Richard C. Yeend Jr. from Mobile, Ala.; and Coast Guard Lt. Jack C. Rittichier from Barberton, Ohio.
On June 9, 1968, Rittichier and Yeend were pilot and co-pilot, respectively, of an HH-3E Jolly Green Giant rescue helicopter that departed Da Nang Air Base, South Vietnam, on a search and rescue mission for a downed U.S. pilot. At the rescue site, Rittichier reported his aircraft had been struck by enemy fire. Before he could safely land, his aircraft stalled and exploded. There were no survivors.
From 1989 through 1992, U.S. officials received information about the crash site from various Southeast Asian sources, including refugees seeking resettlement in the United States. The reports suggested that some of the individuals may have seen or had access to materials collected from the crash site. Throughout the 1990s, joint U.S.-Vietnamese teams led by the Joint Task Force-Full Accounting investigated the crash at many locations in Vietnam, all with negative results.
But in May 2002, a joint team operating in Laos received information about the crash of a large helicopter at a site near Ban Kaboui, Laos, about 15 kilometers from the reported wartime-loss location. In late 2002, another team surveyed the suspected site and uncovered wreckage and crew-related items that correlated to a Jolly Green Giant helicopter. Then in January and February, officials with the Army?s central identification laboratory in Hawaii conducted an excavation where human remains were recovered and later identified as those of the crew.
Rittichier, on a pilot exchange program with the Air Force, was the only Coast Guardsman missing in action from the Vietnam War. About 1,800 Americans are unaccounted for from Vietnam, with 88,000 missing from all conflicts. Achieving the fullest possible accounting of Americans missing in action is a top national priority, according to defense officials. For more details, visit http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo.
Vietnam MIA's Identified
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Vietnam MIA's Identified
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- Typhonis 1
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There are no American POWs left in Vietnam. Every soldier has been accounted for even if they don't have the body.
Korea is a different matter all together. It is known fact that Russia took several US soldiers and brought them to Russia.
Korea is a different matter all together. It is known fact that Russia took several US soldiers and brought them to Russia.
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From article:Alyeska wrote:There are no American POWs left in Vietnam. Every soldier has been accounted for even if they don't have the body.
No, there are still quite a few MIAs that are unaccounted for. Not to say that they are necessarily still being held as POWs, but it is entirely possible.About 1,800 Americans are unaccounted for from Vietnam
- Sea Skimmer
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Your MIA until we find the body. However why we cannot find the bodys of those 1,800 is known. For example if your directly hit by an artillery shell and your body is reduced to paste on trees your MIA unless theres an awful large number of witnesses. That doesnt happen to much in dense jungle fighting.Nathan F wrote:
No, there are still quite a few MIAs that are unaccounted for. Not to say that they are necessarily still being held as POWs, but it is entirely possible.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956