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- <text id=93TT1557>
- <title>
- Apr. 26, 1993: Who Was Left Behind?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 26, 1993 The Truth about Dinosaurs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIETNAM, Page 39
- Who Was Left Behind?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A newly discovered document fuels the argument over the fate
- of American POWs
- </p>
- <p>By STANLEY W. CLOUD/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Sam Allis/
- Boston and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Major wars, from the Peloponnesus to the Persian Gulf,
- are fought and refought in the minds of scholars and military
- buffs long after the bones of the soldiers who did the real
- fighting have turned to dust. So it is likely to be--and then
- some--with the Vietnam War. Last week, for instance, on the
- eve of a crucial U.S. mission to Vietnam, a Harvard researcher
- disclosed parts of a document indicating that Hanoi has lied
- repeatedly about the number of American prisoners captured
- during the war. If the document proves to be accurate, its
- contents could destroy any chance of normalization between the
- U.S. and Vietnam in the foreseeable future.
- </p>
- <p> The document purports to be a translation (from Vietnamese
- to Russian to English) of a report, dated September 1972, by
- North Vietnamese General Tran Van Quang. Unearthed last January
- by researcher Stephen J. Morris in the Communist Party archives
- in Moscow, the document asserts that Vietnam at that time was
- holding 1,205 American POWs. Quang said the Americans were in 11
- prisons scattered around North Vietnam. The number of prisons
- had been increased from four to 11, he said, so that the POWs
- could be dispersed following a failed U.S. raid on the Son Tay
- prison in November 1970.
- </p>
- <p> The most significant item in the Quang report is the
- assertion that there were 1,205 American POWs in captivity that
- September. Six months later, Hanoi released 591 POWs, insisting
- they were the only prisoners alive at that time. If that was
- true and if the Quang report is accurate, more than 600 POWs
- must have died or been killed between the fall of 1972 and April
- 1, 1973.
- </p>
- <p> When news of the report's discovery broke last week,
- several old Vietnam hands, including former Secretary of State
- Henry Kissinger and former National Security Adviser Zbigniew
- Brzezinski, said they were impressed with its apparent
- authenticity. Brzezinski went even further, publicly speculating
- that the Vietnamese were guilty of a massacre similar to the
- infamous execution of 4,500 Polish officers by the Soviet secret
- police in the Katyn Forest in 1940. Said Delores Apodaca Alfond,
- president of the National Alliance of Families, an organization
- that has long accused both Washington and Hanoi of duplicity on
- the POW-MIA issue: "Finally, we've found the smoking gun. It all
- seems to be falling into place now."
- </p>
- <p> Morris, whose skepticism about Vietnamese intentions
- hardly makes him an enthusiastic supporter of normalization, has
- legitimate academic credentials. "I know it's an authentic
- document," insists Morris, who reads Russian and is a research
- associate at the Harvard Center for International Affairs.
- "These files were not for anyone else to read except the
- Communist Party of the Soviet Union." Experts in the Pentagon
- and Congress remain skeptical. "We think it's an authentic
- document," says a Pentagon official involved in POW affairs,
- "but we have a lot of questions about the data in it." Defense
- Intelligence Agency analysts note a certain informality in the
- text, suggesting it might actually be a transcription of an oral
- briefing by General Quang.
- </p>
- <p> That could explain some of the more obvious errors,
- including inaccurate descriptions of the North Vietnamese
- military-prison system and some badly garbled American names
- that do not correspond to the names of any U.S. MIAs. Indeed,
- a covering letter on the document indicates that Quang, who at
- the time was commander of the 4th Military Region in central
- South Vietnam, was reporting to his superiors on the success of
- his mission. He emphasized his plans for Operation Ba Bo, a
- program of "extermination" of South Vietnamese officials. In
- this context, Pentagon and congressional experts say, Quang may
- have engaged in the military briefer's time-honored tendency
- toward overstatement and, like other North Vietnamese officials,
- may have included non-American members of various CIA-run
- commando teams in his accounting of captured "Americans."
- </p>
- <p> Unless non-Americans are included, the analysts say, it is
- not possible to come up with a total of 1,205 American
- candidates for POW status. Apart from MIAs who the Pentagon is
- all but certain died in combat, there are only 135 so-called
- discrepancy cases today. After analyzing the Quang report,
- Robert Sheetz, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency's POW
- office, wrote in an internal Pentagon memo that the "DIA
- believes the number 1,205 could be an accurate accounting of
- total prisoners held" if foreigners working as U.S. agents are
- included. But, Sheetz added in his memo, "the numbers cannot be
- accurate if discussing only U.S. POWs."
- </p>
- <p> Until last week, the Clinton Administration was moving
- with all deliberate speed toward normalizing relations with
- Vietnam and lifting the U.S. trade embargo. Retired General John
- Vessey, who has served the three successive Administrations in
- POW-MIA discussions with Hanoi, departed for Vietnam last week.
- His mission had been to assess whether the POW-MIA dispute had
- been sufficiently resolved to allow normalization to proceed.
- Now Vessey must also try to solve the mystery of the Quang
- report. And no matter what Vessey concludes, there is a good
- chance that many Americans, never keen about normalization in
- the first place, will decide that their old enemies can just
- stew a while longer.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-