By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
HANOI, Vietnam – The Vietnamese government will open three
areas to help resolve the fate of Americans missing in action from the Vietnam
War, DOD officials said here today.
Following a meeting at the Defense
Ministry, Vietnamese Defense Minister Phoung Quang Thanh announced his
government would allow American personnel to examine three areas once off
limits.
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta
thanked the Vietnamese leader for all the support Vietnam has provided over the
years. The Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command’s Detachment 2 based in Hanoi has
conducted 107 field searches for Americans missing in Vietnam. The Vietnamese
government has fully supported these efforts with personnel and information,
said Ron Ward, a casualty resolution specialist with the detachment.
The three sites Vietnam opened to
exploration are in the central part of the country. The first site is in Quang
Binh province and involves the crash of an Air Force F-4C Phantom II jet in
1967 with two personnel aboard. Detachment specialists located the site in
2008, but now they will be allowed to examine it, Ward said.
The second site is in Kontum province
and involves the loss of an Army private first class in January 1968 during the
Tet Offensive.
The third site is in Quang Tri province
and involves the loss of a Marine F-4J Wild Weasel aircraft. One of the crew of
two punched out of the aircraft and was rescued.
Panetta said these efforts are important
to troops serving today, because they know the military means that it will
leave no man behind.
To date, the command has repatriated and
identified 687 remains in Vietnam. A total of 1,284 Americans remain missing.
Of these, 586 cases are in the category of “no further pursuit” -- meaning
there is conclusive evidence the individual perished but it is not possible to
recover remains.
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