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thedrifter
09-13-04, 09:40 PM
America Will Never Forget Its Missing Servicemembers
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Sept. 13, 2004 – The U.S. government will never forget about its missing personnel and won't stop trying to bring them home to their loved ones, said the Defense Department's top prisoner of war and missing personnel official.

"That's a commitment that the United States government has demonstrated over the years that you might say is the gold standard for the world," said Jerry D. Jennings, deputy assistant secretary of defense for prisoner of war/missing personnel affairs, during a Sept. 10 interview with the Pentagon Channel.

"Since it's a worldwide mission, I have the opportunity to talk to leaders from various countries around the world, from Russia to Papa New Guinea. Whether large or small, these leaders all say they wish they could do what we do – not build monuments, not just have some memorial, but actually search for and recover our loved ones when they're missing and bring them home."

He pointed out his office's two-part mission: the personnel accounting part, which is locating and recovering more than 88,000 missing American servicemembers and the personnel-recovery mission, which is search and rescue. "So even in the current wars, when the guys go down, women go down and they're missing on the battlefield, we bring them back, hopefully alive," Jennings said. "But if not alive, we bring their remains back."

The United States is the only country in the world with the tradition of bringing its missing personnel home. For example, the tradition for the British, Australians and others is to bury their dead where they fall. Consequently, there are many "commonwealth" cemeteries around the world, Jennings noted.

"The country that probably comes closest to us in terms of putting premium on returning the missing is Israel," he said. "And they do a really good job with limited resources."

Search and recovery teams work 24-7 to locate and recover remains and to extract missing servicemembers from the jaws of the enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan. Jennings emphasized that the effort to account for America's missing will never end. "If you do go into harm's way and end up missing, our combat search and rescue and personnel recovery teams will try to bring you back whole, alive, healthy and well," he said.

"But if that's not possible, you're not going to be left out there," he added. "We're going to come after you and bring you back. That's a solemn promise we make to our fighting men and women."

America's search for missing personnel goes back to World War II. "The countries we're concentrating on now for World War II recoveries are primarily Burma and Papua, New Guinea," Jennings said. "We have remains all over the islands in the Pacific, but large numbers are concentrated in those two countries."

In Burma, C-46 pilots flew "The Hump" in the Far East from Indian air bases over the Himalaya Mountains and into China, supplying the Chinese in the war against the Japanese in World War II, Jennings noted. "We lost hundreds of aircraft – more than 500 – and more than 1,200 crewmembers," he said. "We're in the business right now of identifying the sites. We're one of the few offices in the U.S. government that has regular dialogue with the Burmese.

"Our issue is humanitarian; it's bringing our warriors home," he said. "We've so far succeeded in dealing with their leadership and gaining access to the country to the sites and conducting recovery operations."

He said during World War II huge battles were fought in Papua, New Guinea, leaving more than 1,000 servicemen missing. "That's a staggering number, but I was recently in Japan talking to my counterparts with the Japanese government's defense ministry and leadership, and they pointed out that they have nearly 70,000 missing in Papua, New Guinea," Jennings said. "They have 1.2 million missing totally in the Pacific. So we have big numbers but not the biggest numbers.

"In many places we work that's the case," he said. "Russia, of course, there are millions missing. So our numbers look rather meager compared to some of our friends and former enemies."

The United States has about 78,000 missing from World War II, including about 39,000 at-sea losses. "Many of those are not recoverable right now because we don't have the technology to search the ocean floor," Jennings explained. "But we expect that at some future date we'll be able to do that."

There are 8,100 missing American servicemen from the Korean War, according to Jennings. "Similar to Burma, we're the only office that conducts regular negotiations with the North Korean government," he said. "I meet at least once a year with my counterpart, a senior general from the North Korean army and we negotiate access to North Korea, send our troops into North Korea. We have to provide for every aspect of the operation, fuel oil, security, transportation and food.

"We're in their country, so we have to be very careful how we operate," he noted. But under the humanitarian umbrella "we've been fortunate and have succeeded and continued operations."

"This year, we'll be going into our fifth operation in one year," he said. "On Memorial Day I was on the peninsula in Seoul (South Korea) and we had a repatriation ceremony with the largest number of recoveries in the history of our operation. We brought what we believe were 19 sets of remains out of the Chosin Reservoir."

Jennings noted that he spoke to more than 7,000 members of the American Legion at the organization's annual conference in Nashville, Tenn., recently, adding that one of the most-sensitive veterans issues is POW/MIA. "They're almost like a board of directors," he pointed out. "They want to know what we're doing, what success we're having, where we're having problems and they're very helpful to us."

He noted that his office has regular contact with families of the missing. "Over the year, we receive thousands of letters and phone calls," Jennings said. "The most effective vehicle for us is something called the family update. We've identified all the family members of the missing across the country. We have computer plotting where we zero in on a major city and identify the family members who live within 300 miles of that city and invite them into a conference."

The family updates are "a terribly emotional thing," Jennings said. Recalling attending a such session in Little Rock, Ark., Jennings said, "A very elderly lady came out to me and said, 'Could I see you privately.'" They sat down at a table and the woman started talking about her 18-year-old boy who went off to war in Korea.

"She was talking about this young man and how much she loved him and how much she missed him, and started crying," Jennings said. "She said, 'I would recognize him today if he walked through that door.'

"I'm thinking ma'am, your 18-year-old boy you wouldn't recognize at all; he's going be like 68 years old," he said. "What they forget is we don't find whole bodies. We find fragments of bones, and rarely a full skeleton. But in her mind, a mother's love is so powerful, that this boy is still in the flesh and she'd recognize him in a minute. And she wants him back."

When families attend the updates, they're given all the available information. "Most of our work doesn't lead to recovery," Jennings noted. "It's a detective effort. It's going out there in Korea getting a unit diary and finding out that a unit fought at the Chosin and trying to identify those that survived the battle, those that are missing and trying to find out where they might be.

"It takes a tremendous amount of effort in the files, archives and on the ground," he pointed out. "In Vietnam, it's a little bit easier and a lot of the loses were air loses. If (it's) a Phantom F-4 (fighter jet) that went into a mountainside, you may not know where the precise location is. But you know if you find a tail number, or some serial number off the gear with that aircraft, you probably got that pilot. The guy who left with that bird is probably the guy you're going to find."

Jennings said when he took the job, one of his initiatives was to bring more senior leadership from the various countries to the forefront so the issue didn't get lost in the bureaucracy of the countries where we work.

"So I invited the senior most leaders from the Vietnam War from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam to meet with me for consultations," Jennings said. "The first meeting we had was two years ago and it was successful. And tried to carve out a vision for the future, and it worked. We had the second meeting this year in Cambodia and I invited the prime minister to host the meeting. I didn't know if he would accept or not, but he showed up and opened the meeting."

He said one of the most dramatic examples of sharing with another country occurred when a member of the U.S. Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIA, of which he's co-chairman, contacted him requesting information. "They had a Russian who wanted information about a relative who was missing and they believed the information was in our files," Jennings explained. "We get thousands of files from the Russians to review about searching for our missing.

"We came up with a dossier on this individual," he said. "A year ago this month, I went over and we had a press conference and announced that I would be turning this file over to this citizen on her father who had been a POW in World War II. It demonstrated the U.S. helping the Russians with their missing."

Jennings said media from all over Europe and the U.S. recorded the event. The added attention, he noted, was because the file was that of Joseph Stalin's eldest son.

"The lady who had requested the file was the granddaughter of Joseph Stalin," Jennings said. "So that was a huge event. She'd heard rumors her entire life, but she learned for the first time exactly what happened to her father.

World War II veterans with tears in their eyes talk about their buddies who died. "Thank God there's an organization in the federal government that's doing something about that," Jennings said, "not just forgetting these guys. That was the defining moment in many of these veterans' lives. Whatever else they did with their life was pretty normal. But the idea that they went and fought on foreign lands for their country and for freedom and liberty and what we believe in is something that's still very precious to them.

"As long as we have the resources I think we're going to pursue this mission," he said.

Biography:
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Jerry D. Jennings
http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/special/dasd_bio_jennings.htm


http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/index.html
Related Site:
Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office

Related Article:
Joint Command Focuses on America's Missing
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Sep2004/n09132004_2004091307.html


Ellie

Never Forgotten

thedrifter
09-13-04, 09:41 PM
2004 National POW/MIA Recognition Day
September 14, 2004

http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/images/POW_MIA2004sm.jpg



http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/powday/pow_rec_day_04_poster.htm


Ellie

thedrifter
09-14-04, 08:49 AM
Chairman's POW/MIA Recognition Day Message
Special to American Forces Press Service

On September 14th, we will honor the service and sacrifice of the men and women of our Armed Forces who have been prisoners of war, and those who are missing in action. We will also remember their families and friends.

We owe a priceless debt of gratitude to those heroes who returned to us after enduring so much hardship in captivity and to their families who endured the pain and sacrifice of living each day without knowing their fate. We remain steadfastly determined to fully account for each and every servicemember yet to return home. Their selfless sacrifices paid for our many freedoms; their honor and courage continue to inspire those of us in uniform, serving our great nation today.

Our solemn pledge to those who remain unaccounted for is this: However long it takes, wherever it takes us, whatever the costs – we will bring you home.

General Pace and all the Joint Chiefs join me in encouraging each of you, on this POW/MIA Recognition Day, to reflect on the selfless sacrifices of these brave and never forgotten heroes.

God Bless America.

Gen. Richard B. Myers, USAF

2004 National POW/MIA Recognition Day

Ellie

thedrifter
09-14-04, 07:45 PM
Wolfowitz, Myers Host Pentagon POW/MIA Recognition Ceremony
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Sept. 14, 2004 – "When one of our own is killed in action, taken prisoner or becomes missing, we lose a member of our military family," the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told attendees today during the Pentagon's National POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony.

"When one of our own is becomes a POW or is missing, their immediate family and the larger military family endure the tragic pain of not knowing where they are or if they will ever return," Air Force Gen. B. Richard Myers said.

That, Myers said, is why the annual POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony carries so much meaning for immediate and military families. "We gather to formally remember our loved ones and their service and to renew our pledge that we shall never, never forget them," Myers said.

The character of the nation is reflected in the character of those who serve, Myers said. "And those we remember today," he added, "reflect the very best of our nation."

"The recovery and return of our missing Americans can mean years of painstaking effort," noted Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who also spoke. "And some 600 men and women, both military and civilians, around the world take part in everything from diplomatic negotiations and field operations to forensic analysis. They are tireless and dedicated. And through their latest efforts, the remains of fallen Americans have just been recovered in North Korea and are now headed home."

Wolfowitz said the sacrifices made my POWs and those missing in action have been great. "We're here to remember and honor the courage of America's POWs and missing countrymen who risked everything, facing the worst of war to preserve the best of America," Wolfowitz told the large gathering on the Pentagon's River Parade Field.

Troops from each military service paraded in honor of America's POWs and missing servicemembers. An all-service color guard posted the colors, and music was provided by "The President's Own" U.S. Marine Corps Band.

Wolfowitz assured American troops fighting terrorism in Iraq, Afghanistan and other parts of the globe that they can be fully confident that if they're captured, become missing or fall in battle, this nation will spare no effort to bring them home.

"That," the deputy secretary said, "is our solemn pledge. However long it takes, whatever it takes, whatever the cost."

Myers called the event's keynote speaker, World War II Medal of Honor recipient Hawaii Sen. Daniel Inouye, "a true American hero." Inouye fought with the all- Japanese American 442nd Regimental Combat Team, which was the most decorated unit in U.S. military history. With the motto "Go for Broke," the 442nd had more than 18,000 awards bestowed upon it, including 9,500 Purple Hearts, 52 Distinguished Service Crosses, Seven Distinguished Unit Citations, but only one Medal of Honor.

Calling the 80-year-old senator a friend of the military, Wolfowitz said no one who understands better what the men and women of the armed forces want for the country and what they are prepared to give.

"No one who understands better how important the unstinting support of the American people is for our troops as they undertake their difficult and dangerous work," Wolfowitz noted. "No one understands better than Dan Inouye the kind of devotion to our nation the American soldier takes to war … and how important is the pledge we make to them that we will leave no man or woman behind."

Inouye said today's military members stand for the same principles as the POWs and MIAs before them. "American POWs and MIAs have honored their nation through their service and their sacrifice, much like the magnificent young men and women standing so proudly on the parade field today," he said. "Those who wear the uniform today and those who went before them know, better than most, why bringing home our missing Americans is a sacred commitment. That mission rests squarely on the shoulders of those of us to whom you have entrusted some measure of leadership. Your support and encouragement will continue to hold us accountable."

He told the military members in the audience it's important for them to know the nation will not abandon them. "Though this effort is engrained in the hearts and minds of Americans, it's you who ensure this mission continues," he said. "You're aware of the monumental effort to account for the missing from all wars, but the commitment goes much further than that.

"While we seek to bring home the warriors of the past, we must also ensure that you warriors of the present – should you go into harm's way – your nation will bring you home. Whatever it takes!" To the families of the missing, Inouye said, "Your government will not rest until they all come home."

Observances of National POW/MIA Recognition Day are held across the country on military installations and ships at sea and in state capitals, schools and veterans facilities.

This observance is one of six days throughout the year that Congress has mandated the flying of the National League of Families POW/MIA flag. The others are Armed Forces Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day. The flag is flown at major military installations; national cemeteries; post offices; Veterans Affairs medical facilities; the Korean War and Vietnam Veterans memorials on the national mall; the offices of the secretaries of state, defense and veterans affairs and director of the selective service system; and the White House

http://www.defenselink.mil/cgi-bin/dlprint.cgi?http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Sep2004/n09142004_2004091408.html


Ellie

thedrifter
09-14-04, 10:05 PM
Vietnam POW Recalls Horrors, Some Smiles From Captivity
By Kathleen T. Rhem
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Sept. 14, 2004 -- Nov. 11, 1966, was to have been a red-letter day for Marine Capt. Orson Swindle -- he was flying his 205th, and last, combat mission over North Vietnam. But the mission ended vastly different from the way he'd envisioned.

The F-8 Crusader he was flying was shot down at about 2 p.m., Swindle recalled during a recent interview in his office in Washington, D.C. He is close to finishing a seven-year term as a commissioner with the Federal Trade Commission.

That day in 1966, Swindle ejected and was captured immediately. North Vietnamese soldiers were shooting at him from all directions as he drifted toward the ground in his parachute. He said he recalls asking God to care for his wife and 4-year-old son, Kevin.

"(North Vietnamese soldiers) were waiting for me with arms outstretched," he said, noting that he was quickly disarmed of his pistol and stripped of his gear to his flight suit and boots.

The next time he was to see his wife and son, more than six years had gone by, all of them spent in North Vietnamese prisoner-of-war camps.

He spent the first few days in shock and disbelief, thinking surely he must be in a bad dream. The North Vietnamese soldiers displayed him in a local village, allowing the townsfolk to beat him with sticks and rocks as they passed. Swindle said he remembers thinking about a steak he had promised to buy a fellow officer at the officers club that evening when he returned from his mission.

"So I was thinking about that steak as I was laying in that pit and people were beating on me, and (I was) saying, 'This cannot be true, cannot be true,'" he said. "And then, the realization obviously sinks in and you're in shock."

Torture began in earnest the following day, when he was brought before three interrogators and about a dozen soldiers. He initially tried to stick to the textbook answers: name, rank, serial number, date of birth. But then the real pain was applied.

In a steady voice, Swindle described his torturers applying tourniquets to his arms with parachute cord. "They took the cord and cinched it so tightly above my elbows that it literally caused my hands to contract because of the pressure on the ligaments," he said.

And that was only the beginning. Next they tied his arms behind his back with three men applying pressure on each side. "(They) pulled against each other until my arms, they folded them up my back and my hands went back to my neck," he said.

Next the torturers wrapped cord around his body so it looked like he had no arms. They tied parachute cord around his thumbs, which were at the back of his head, and hoisted his body off the ground by throwing the cord over the rafters. Swindle said the technique pulled his shoulders out of socket.

"And it's about that point where you think you're insane, 'cause this is hurting quite badly, and there's not a soul in the world that can help me," he said.

That's when he learned to lie, figuring he could give them just enough truth to make his lies believable. When the interrogators wanted Swindle to name the men in his squadron, he told them he couldn't think in such pain. They'd have to loosen the ropes to get anything out of him. When they started to loosen his bindings, he gave them the names of his high-school football coach and assistant coach, saying that was is squadron commander and executive officer.

When they loosened the ropes some more, he gave them the names of his entire high-school football team as his squadron's pilots. Swindle chuckled as he recalled a welcome-home gala several years later in his small south-Georgia hometown. "All those guys were in the audience," he said. "And I said, 'You better not ever go to North Vietnam, because they're looking for you.'"

Swindle said the experience with the ropes from his second day in captivity was repeated four or five times before he was moved to the infamous Hanoi Hilton prison camp in late December of that year. The lies were all about coping. Prisoners learned many different ways to cope in their tortured captivity. "You give in," he said. "So don't think you don't give in. … But it's how you do it and what you give them.

"You're trying to minimize what they gain from you, because we have a very strong sense of how they use propaganda," Swindle explained.

The torture wasn't all that took its toll. Minimal food wore on all the men. Swindle is 6 feet, 2 inches tall. He said he weighed about 195 pounds when he was shot down, but estimated he was at about 120 after three years in the Hanoi Hilton.

Swindle smiled, though, when he spoke of the friendships he made in the POW camps. He said it wasn't like Hogan's Heroes, the 1960s television comedy about life in a German World War II POW camp. The prisoners in that fictional camp lived together in large groups and had considerable freedom. Prisoners of the North Vietnamese were kept in small cells with no windows, often alone for long periods.

At one point Swindle was put in a cell for a day and a half with Navy Ensign George Coker, who today he calls a life-long friend. Coker changed Swindle's life in the camp -- he taught his short-time roommate the tap code used by prisoners there to communicate. "That tap code would become our lifeblood, literally, for the years to come," Swindle said.

He described "enormous friendships" built up with people he never even saw by communicating with the tap code through the walls. Those friendships "are long and fast," he said.

The tap code allowed the men to help each other keep their spirits up. They'd share information about the torture techniques, what questions the interrogators were asking and how they answered, tips on how to cope with the pain from different methods of torture, anything they could think of. It allowed them to resist, as a group, the insanity that was all around them, Swindle said.

"As I said, they break everybody," he said. "But we helped each other, and that was the sustaining morale factor that got me through."

The period in captivity wasn't without humor, and the men celebrated their small victories where they could find them. Swindle takes particular pleasure in telling the story of how he convinced the North Vietnamese captors Nov. 10 is National Doughnut Day in the United States.

He said one interrogator liked to practice his English by bragging about his country's 4,000-year history. Once during an October spent there, this individual was bragging about an upcoming Vietnamese holiday and taunted Swindle by telling him the United States is such a young country it couldn't have any meaningful holidays.

Swindle convinced him a major American holiday was right around the corner, National Doughnut Day, on Nov. 10. He described doughnuts as similar to something the men got served on rare occasions in the prison camp. Periodically the Vietnamese would take old, dirty bread and fry it and sprinkle it with a little sugar. The men took to calling the concoctions "sticky buns."

As soon as that interrogation session was over, Swindle "got on the wall" and tapped out what he had done so the others would respond in kind. Sure enough, on Nov. 10 that year, the North Vietnamese brought around these sticky buns in celebration of National Doughnut Day. Swindle had gotten their North Vietnamese jailers to unwittingly celebrate the Marine Corps birthday.

Good humor got the prisoners far and allowed them to handle much more than they would have been able to otherwise. "We were keenly aware of the damage that can be done from negative thinking," Swindle said. Today, he said, he believes the former POWs he spent time with are "without a doubt some of the most optimistic people you've ever seen."

Indeed, in person, Swindle is a man of incredibly good humor. He approaches life with a self-deprecating sense of humor that just infects those around him. When telling the story of how he started a lifelong friendship with George Coker, Swindle joked that Coker is getting old now. "He's not like me," he joked. "I stayed young and beautiful."

Later, when he was describing a particularly brutal beating, he revealed how he believed the North Vietnamese broke his nose. "(They) did something to it," he said, pointing to his nose with a humorous twinkle in his eye. "It's not normally this size."

Perhaps surprisingly, Swindle said he suffers no trauma from his time as a POW. As a rule though, he said, he doesn't watch war movies and doesn't particularly like violence in any movies.

"If anything," he said, "it probably made me stronger. … I'm not easily rattled by things. I'm a great listener. I'm patient more so than I was when I got shot down and just pretty much at peace with myself.

"The best group of people I ever served with in my life were the people I went in prison with," he added.

In speaking of today's servicemembers, Swindle was equally laudatory. "I'm proud of them," he said. "God, just tremendously proud of them. They are so much smarter than we were.

"They're not as good-looking," he said, again with the gleam in the eye. "But they're smarter. They're tough."

Swindle said he never lets servicemembers pass him in an airport without thanking them for their service. "I say, 'I'm an old Marine colonel, and I want you to know I appreciate you,'" he said. "They need to be told that a lot. They really do. They're great."

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Sep2004/n09142004_2004091412.html


Ellie

thedrifter
09-15-04, 03:08 PM
Good Morning, Vietnam’ DJ keeps promise to raise awareness about MIAs


By Ron Jensen, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Tuesday, September 14, 2004

RAF MILDENHALL, England — Adrian Cronauer, who was portrayed by actor Robin Williams in the movie “Good Morning, Vietnam,” wants to get some things out of the way at the start.

“If I did half the things he did in that movie, I’d still be in Leavenworth and not England,” Cronauer said Monday morning before addressing a POW/MIA luncheon at RAF Mildenhall’s Galaxy Club.

The movie, which Cronauer co-authored, was based loosely on his experience as an Armed Forces Network disc jockey for one year in Vietnam while in the Air Force. But, as he said, it is a movie and Williams’ manic performance was of a decidedly nonmilitary character.

“No, I was not thrown out of Vietnam,” he said. “I did not have, as far as I knew, any friends who were Viet Cong.”

He did leave a restaurant once shortly before a bomb exploded in it, but most of the other events in the movie are fiction.

Cronauer, 66, is now special assistant to the director of the prisoners of war/missing in action office in the Pentagon. In that capacity, he travels extensively, including several trips back to Vietnam, to raise awareness of the effort to account for America’s missing.

The movie made Cronauer a celebrity. He once was asked for an autograph by singer Bette Midler.

It grew from his attempt to sell a situation comedy to Hollywood based on his time in Vietnam. The top shows in 1979 were “M*A*S*H” and “WKRP in Cincinnati.” Put the Korean War comedy and the show about a Midwestern radio station together, he figured, and you had his Vietnam experience.

“Nobody believed you could do a comedy about Vietnam,” he said.

Williams learned of the idea and was intrigued enough to have a screenplay developed, earning an Oscar nomination for his performance.

Cronauer has used his celebrity status to promote causes in which he believes and to support Republican candidates for office. He campaigned for President Bush and was offered his current job in the Bush administration.

On Sept. 11, 2001, while the dust was settling from the terrorist attacks on the United States, Cronauer decided to accept the offer. His job description goes on for several pages.

“I’ve read it three or four times and still don’t know what it says,” he said. “But at the bottom it says, ‘Other duties as assigned.’ So that’s what I do.”

He said the government makes a promise to everyone who serves in uniform that they will not be forgotten, whether they are captured or listed as missing in action. The motto of his office, he said, is “Keeping the promise.”

More than 2,000 people remain missing from the war in Vietnam.

His office, which is part of the Department of Defense, also ensures that the military has the equipment to help rescue downed pilots and others, preventing them from becoming another statistic.

“We want people who might be going into danger’s way to know that they won’t be abandoned or forgotten, that we care about their welfare,” he said.

http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=24361


Ellie

thedrifter
09-16-04, 04:18 PM
Death March Survivor Recalls POW Camp Life
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Sept. 16, 2004 -- The Pentagon's POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony Sept. 14 brought back memories of a horrid, week-long march in a scorching malaria-infected jungle, and being starved, kicked and beaten for World War II Bataan Death March survivor Dr. Alex Kelly, 87.

Dr. Alex Kelly, left, a former World War II POW and survivor of the 1942 Bataan Death March in the Philippines, poses with Joint Chiefs Chairman Air Force Gen. Richard Myers, and Kelly's friend, World War II Army Air Corps veteran Harold Koffsky, 90, after the Pentagon's National POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony Sept. 14. Photo by Rudi Williams
(Click photo for screen-resolution image); high- resolution image available.

"I'm personally pleased that there's this kind of interest in POWs and MIAs so they have these ceremonies each year," said Kelly, who spent more than three and a half years as a prisoner in Japanese prison camps in the Philippines and Japan. He relayed his experiences in the camps in an American Forces Press Service interview after the ceremony.

Kelly said he was a POW from April 1942, when the Philippines surrendered to Japanese forces, until the end of the war in the Pacific on Sept. 2, 1945. A first lieutenant at the time, he was captured while serving as the battalion surgeon for the 57th Infantry Regiment "Philippine Scouts."

The scouts were native Filipinos attached to the U.S. Army's Philippine Department prior to and during World War II. They were mostly enlisted troops under the command of American officers. However, a handful of Filipinos received commissions from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.

More than 70,000 Filipinos and Americans surrendered to Japanese forces. It was the largest American army in history to surrender.

The Japanese led their captured prisoners on a forced march out of Bataan.

The trek through the Philippines jungles was labeled a death march because so many people died on the march, Kelly noted. "The Japanese marched us from Bataan to the prison camps further north in Luzon, which was about 60 miles for me and much longer for some people," he said.

"Many, many people died along the way. I saw dead people in the ditches along the road all along the way," Kelly continued. Conditions were terrible -- no food, no water, no transportation, hot summer sun -- just a terrible situation."

Kelly said he doesn't know how many pounds he lost during the march, quipping, "I was a skinny guy when we started."

He said his years as a POW were long and full of anxiety, uncertainty and loneliness. "I never had any contact with my family or friends in this country," he noted. "I had malaria a number of times, but otherwise my health remained fairly good.

"It just seemed like a never-ending, dull, boring, miserable existence," he said.

During the march, Kelly said, he only ate a total of one to one and a half cups of rice. He said he received water during the march, but not everyone did.

"The first several months in the prison camp all there was was rice, but more of it," he noted. "We got a canteen cup full of rice every day and some green leafy vegetables, mainly sweet potato leaves. They boiled those into a soup, but they didn't give us any of the sweet potatoes.

At the first prison camp Kelly spent time in, Camp O'Donnell, the Japanese gave the men one cow for roughly 1,000 men every two or three weeks. "I would get a teaspoonful of meat and a bowl of soup, which the meat had been boiled in," he said.

The Japanese transferred the Army doctor to a POW camp in Japan in March 1943. "At that time, there were extra medical personnel in the Philippines, so they sent a detail of 50 doctors and a couple hundred medical corpsmen to Japan," Kelly explained. "When we got to Japan, we were scattered out into various prison camps to treat the POWs."

He said memories of that horrid, haunting experience are long gone. "I don't think about it very much anymore," said Kelly, who earned his Army Reserve commission in the medical corps after graduating from the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta in 1938 and was called to active duty in 1941.

He said his Bataan experience caused him to make "tremendous changes in my life, but I can't say that it scarred me."

Though he hasn't been heavily involved with POW/MIA issues, Kelly said he decided to attend the Pentagon ceremony to see what it was like. "I wanted to see if I wanted to become more involved with POW/MIA activities some time in the future," said Kelly, who got out of the Army about a year after returning home. "It was a moving ceremony for me."

Ellie

thedrifter
09-18-04, 05:49 PM
Okinawa memorializes POW/MIAs <br />
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By David Allen, Stars and Stripes <br />
Pacific edition, Friday, September 17, 2004 <br />
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CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — U.S. servicemembers still listed as being prisoners of...

TracGunny
09-18-04, 07:55 PM
Thursday, September 16, 2004 Last modified at 3:32 p.m. on Wednesday, September 15, 2004

By JO1 Mike England
Assistant Editor

Every year, Navy Region Southeast and the City of Jacksonville's Veterans Service Division honors the sacrifices that many veterans have made with a POW/MIA Recognition Observance aboard NAS Jacksonville. During the observance, one former prisoner of war (POW) is selected to share his experiences and insights with the audience. This year's speaker, Retired Air Force Col. William Byrns, will reveal what it was like for him to be a POW in Vietnam from May 1972 until March 1973.

Byrns was born Dec. 21, 1943 in Greenville, Miss. After graduating from William Jewell College in 1967, Byrns, the son of a career Air Force pilot, entered Officer Training School. Following his commissioning in November of 1967, he began undergraduate pilot training followed by radar school and F-4E flight training. In October of 1969, Byrns was assigned to the 469th Tactical Fighter Squadron, 388th tactical Fighter Wing, Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand to fly the F-4E. He then returned to the United States in October 1970 before being deployed to the Tactical Fighter Squadron, 12th Tactical Fighter Wing, Phucat Air Base, Republic of Vietnam to fly the F-41.

Phucat Air Base closed in October 1971, which led to Byrns being reassigned to the 435th Tactical Fighter Squadron, 8th, Tactical Fighter Wing, Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand.

Byrns was shot down by anti-aircraft fire on May 23, 1972, just 10 days before he was scheduled to rotate back home, while flying the F-4D on a fast forward air control mission in North Vietnam, which lead to his capture by North Vietnamese forces.

''I was flying a fast forward air control mission, which is when an F-4 is sent to search for and destroy enemy trucks and tanks. We were working north of the demilitarized zone (DMZ) because a lot of weapons and tanks were going south. They began firing surface to air missiles at us. Our intelligence had told us that there were no surface to airs in the area, but they always moved them in so fast. Having to avoid the missiles forced me to move my aircraft lower and slower and eventually their anti aircraft guns hit me in the belly and took out my engine. The F-4 will fly with all kinds of hits, but when you take out the engine it drops like a rock so my co-pilot and I had to eject,'' Byrns said.

After his plane had crashed, Byrns focused evading North Vietnamese troops, but to no avail. ''When I was shot down, I got on the radio with my squadron and basically did everything I was taught to do by the book. At first, they said they would send a helicopter out for me. I was pretty well hidden and wasn't hurt too bad so I thought I was in good shape. Unfortunately, they radioed back and said they couldn't send a chopper out until the morning because of Vietnamese surface-to-air missiles. I knew then that things weren't looking to good for me,'' Byrns explained.

''I could hear the Vietnamese going through the bushes and shooting, trying to scare me, it was working. Finally, at about midnight, they stepped on me and I found myself surrounded and looking at the wrong end of an AK-47. The first guy grabbed me, took my .38, put it to my head and fired. The gun didn't go off. The story behind that is, one of the guys at the squadron had shot himself in the leg playing with his.38. So safety said we needed keep the first chamber empty, but as soon as you got on the ground chamber it. I remember pulling my gun and I thought I had chambered it, but fortunately, for me it didn't fire when he pulled the trigger,'' Byrns continued.

After being severely beaten, Byrns and his co-pilot were then marched to a prison camp in Hanoi where they would spend the next 10 months of their lives. Day-to-day living was extremely difficult, but the prisoners found ways to communicate with each other.

''Life was excruciatingly boring. There were usually three to four people to a cell with only a wooden platform to sleep on and a bucket to go to the bathroom in. Outside of our weekly bath, the only thing there was to do was to try to communicate with the other cells without getting caught and sent to solitary confinement. Solitary confinement consisted of being locked away in a tiny room by yourself with only your interrogator and a searing thirst to keep you company,'' he remembered.

''I almost went delirious with thirst a few times. If we were caught trying to communicate with other cells, we would be beaten and sent to solitary. Food consisted of a little bread with powdered milk, soup with plenty of bugs in it and some tea,'' Byrns recalled.

After 10 months, five days, 12 hours, 26 minutes of captivity, the North Vietnamese released Byrns into the custody of the U.S. Air Force March 28,1973.

''We were released in the order we were shot down. I was in the second to last group to leave. There were some guys who had been there for seven years. They took us on a bus ride to the airport. Then we marched in formation to a gate and one by one, we were released and greeted by a one star general. When we got on the plane guys started breaking down. We got cigars, coffee, and milkshakes and when the plane left the ground a loud cheer went up. When we got to the Philippines nobody went to bed for three days. We all called our families and ate a lot,'' Byrns continued.

Byrns and his cohorts were able to survive a situation in which many would have folded. So how did they survive their internment and return home with honor?

''We got through it with the best training in the world and faith in the lord. The North Vietnamese could get us to the end of our mental and physical rope, even though we knew how to avoid answering questions and take beatings, they could get us there because they had the time to do it. The only thing they couldn't break was our spirit. They couldn't understand our belief in God. I also had they opportunity to be in a situation where I met some of the greatest leaders imaginable. They were able to lead even though the Vietnamese did everything they could to break them,'' Byrns said.

For more information on POW/MIA related issues, visit www.powmiaff.org.

http://www.jaxairnews.com/stories/091604/mil_byrns001.shtml