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thedrifter
03-01-05, 07:22 AM
No. 197-05
Feb 25, 2005
IMMEDIATE RELEASE



Missing Korean War Serviceman Identified


The Department of Defense announced today that the remains of a U. S. Air Force pilot, missing in action from the Korean War, has been identified and will soon be returned to his family for burial with full military honors.

Air Force Captain Troy “Gordie” Cope of Norfolk, Ark., will be buried in Plano, Texas, on May 31.

On Sept. 16, 1952, Cope and his wingman, both flying F-86 Saber Jets from Kimpo Air Base in South Korea, encountered six MiG-15s of the North Korean Air Force. Cope was flying near the Yalu River, separating North Korea from China, on combat air patrol in an area known as “MiG Alley.” In the ensuing aerial dogfight, Cope lost contact with his wingman and was never seen again.

In 1995, an American businessman saw a metal dogtag belonging to Cope in the military museum in Dandong, China. He copied the data and reported it to U.S. authorities, yet inquiries to both the Chinese and North Korean governments yielded no further leads.

Then in 1999, during archival research by analysts of the Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO), documents about Cope’s shootdown were discovered in Russian archives in Podolsk. These archives held documents that included statements and drawings by the Russian pilots who were flying the MiG-15s for the North Koreans. Also included were detailed reports on the ground search carried out by Russian and Chinese officials in Dandong where the crash site was located.

After DPMO’s discussions with the Chinese government in 2003, a team of specialists from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command excavated the site in May 2004 and found aircraft debris and human remains which were identified in October. Dandong citizens and officials assisted the team throughout the excavation, and were praised by the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for POW/Missing Personnel Affairs Jerry D. Jennings.

“Without the assistance of the people of Dandong, this would not have been possible. The family of Troy Cope and the American people express our appreciation to all those who helped us bring Troy Cope home again,” said Jennings.

Of the 88,000 Americans missing from all conflicts, 8,100 are MIA from the Korean War.

Ellie

thedrifter
03-01-05, 07:46 AM
Family Finally Gets Official Word on Korean War Vet's Fate
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Feb. 25, 2005 -- More than a half-century after North Korean fighter jets shot down U.S. Air Force Capt. Troy "Gordie" Cope's F-86 Sabre Jet over Danong, China, his family finally has official word of what happened to him and is preparing to bury him this May.

Chris Cope, who was born too late to ever know his uncle, calls this homecoming an extraordinary example of the U.S. military's longstanding commitment to bringing its fallen servicemembers home so they can be returned to their families.

It's a promise Army Brig. Gen. W. Montague Winfield, head of the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, says the nation will carry out "no matter how long it takes" or how challenging the circumstances.

In Cope's case, that took decades of keen detective work, intense political negotiations, a month-long recovery operation, and state-of-the-art identification technology -- all fueled by dogged determination.

Cope took off from Kimpo Air Base, South Korea, on Sept. 16, 1952, as part of a fighter sweep to protect other U.S. air missions across North Korea. The flight headed north toward "MiG Alley," an area near the Yalu River that separates North Korea from China.

Cope and his wingman, Capt. Karl Dittmer, encountered four MiG-15 aircraft near Yalu and engaged in a ferocious aerial dogfight. Dittmer was able to chase away several of the MiGs but lost radio and visual contact with Cope in the dense clouds.

For the next 52 years, Cope was listed as "missing in action," with U.S. efforts to get information about him from the Chinese and North Korean governments hitting a brick wall.

Chris Cope said he never knew his uncle, but grew up hearing much about him from his family, particularly his father, Air Force Maj. Carl Cope, who served as a pilot during World War II.

"They never gave up hope of finding out what happened to him," Cope told the American Forces Press Service.

Yet for many years, the family struggled with the difficulty of not knowing the missing airman's fate and wondering if they ever would. "To see what my dad and his brothers went through, I can tell you that the 'not knowing' portion is just devastating," Chris Cope said.

In 1988, the family, fearing they might never find the closure they so desperately wanted, held a memorial service in Norfolk, Ark. Now, 17 years later, the family is again making plans to honor Gordie Cope -- but this time with an actual burial at a military cemetery in Plano, Texas, on May 31.

A chance observation by an American tourist and increased cooperation between China and the United States on POW and MIA cases helped provided the break in DoD's investigation of the Cope case.

In 1995, a U.S. businessman traveling in Dandong, visited the military museum there and noticed a display that included Cope's military dog tag, as well as those of two other U.S. servicemembers. The businessman copied the information and reported it to U.S. authorities.

Again, repeated inquiries to both the Chinese and North Korean governments came up with no new information.

But four years later, analysts working for the Defense POW/MIA Personnel Office discovered documents about Cope's shootdown in archives in Podolsk, Russia. Their records search, possible through an agreement with the U.S.-Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIAs established in 1992, revealed extensive details about the case, according to Norm Kass, who directs the office's Russia division.

Included were statements and drawings by the Russian pilots flying the MiG-15s for the North Koreans and detailed reports about the ground search carried out by Russian and Chinese officials at the crash site.

Now armed with enough information to launch a recovery mission, the U.S. government went to the Chinese and got the green light to move forward.

In May 2004, the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command sent a team of specialists to Dandong to excavate the site. There, they carried out a month-long mission, recovering human remains and aircraft parts at the crash site.

Chris Cope flew to China to observe the first two weeks of the mission. "This was just too significant not to be a part of," he said.

Cope said he was "elated" when the team began uncovering items they believed belonged to his uncle, including a size 8 boot heel. "There was no question in my mind that we had found Gordie's remains," he said.

But the military requires far more concrete evidence before making an official identification. They returned the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command headquarters in Hawaii in July 2004 and went to work at the command's Central Identification Laboratory, which uses state-of-the-art techniques to help determine the identity of recovered remains.

In just over three months, the lab staff was able to positively identify Gordie Cope, and Air Force officials notified the family.

Chris Cope said the resolution of his uncle's case brings tremendous relief to his family and proof that the military lives up to its commitment to make every effort to bring a missing servicemember home.

He said there's "no question" that the military went the extra measure to resolve an extremely complicated, longstanding case.

As the family plans the funeral -- to be held just one day after Memorial Day and exactly one year after Chris Cope observed the recovery operation in China -- Cope said he plans to invite four other families of missing servicemembers to attend.

"During the funeral, we want to pay tribute to them," Cope said. He's hopeful his own family's story will give them hope that their loved ones' fates will also be resolved.

"This sends a message to never lose hope," he said.

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for POW/MIA Affairs Jerry D. Jennings led a delegation to China to thank the Chinese for their help and to explore more opportunities for the two countries to work together on POW and MIA cases. Among issued discussed were options for reviewing documents related to POW camps where Americans were held during the Korean War.

Jennings said "there's much more work to be done," but added he's confident that the just-concluded discussions "will move us forward on several cases."

Ellie