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- <text id=94TT1413>
- <title>
- Oct. 17, 1994: Southeast Asia:Americans Left Behind
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 17, 1994 Sex in America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOUTHEAST ASIA, Page 50
- The Americans Left Behind
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As the nation's last Vietnam POW is declared dead, fresh details
- emerge on an failed effort to save captured servicemen
- </p>
- <p>By Douglas Waller/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Colonel Charles Shelton was the last official Vietnam War POW:
- the one missing American still designated as being alive by
- the Pentagon. Shot down during a reconnaissance mission over
- northern Laos on April 29, 1965, the 33-year-old pilot managed
- to parachute safely from his RF-101C jet and make radio contact
- with his home base after he hit the ground. But he was grabbed
- by Pathet Lao fighters and vanished. Unable to verify his fate,
- the Air Force listed Shelton as "known captured alive" for 29
- years.
- </p>
- <p> On Sept. 20, the Air Force, at the request of Shelton's children,
- finally put the question to rest and changed his status to "killed
- in action." Last week, as a bugler played taps, the Pentagon
- held a memorial for Shelton at Arlington National Cemetery.
- His name will be carved on the back of the headstone marking
- the grave of his widow who, deeply frustrated by so many dashed
- hopes, killed herself four years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Even decades later, many families of Americans who might have
- been left behind in Southeast Asia when the war ended have never
- felt satisfied that the U.S. did everything it could to find
- them. As the last POW was symbolically buried, TIME was piecing
- together the tale of the one attempt the U.S. made after the
- war to rescue American prisoners. The bare outlines of that
- 1981 plan have appeared in occasional press stories over the
- years. The CIA still refuses to discuss the case. Pentagon officials
- today say the Defense Department never had reliable intelligence
- on whether Americans were still alive. But here is a full report
- of that abortive effort, as uncovered in government documents
- and more than 20 interviews with military, intelligence and
- Reagan Administration officials involved in the rescue planning:
- </p>
- <p> "W/1" was one of the most sensitive sources the CIA ever developed
- in Laos: an elderly woman with close ties to the communist leadership
- in the capital of Vientiane. Only a handful of senior officials
- in Washington were privy to her information. According to CIA
- documents, on Nov. 14, 1980, W/1 gave her CIA handlers a startling
- report: about 30 U.S. pilots were working on a road gang near
- the central Laotian town of Nhommarath. Those same summaries
- reported that a spy-satellite photo confirmed that a prison
- camp had recently been built near the town.
- </p>
- <p> Military officials on the Pentagon's Joint staff in Washington
- thought that some pilots shot down over Laos were being held
- captive and could be at the camp. Two months after receiving
- W/1's report, the Pentagon began preparing Operation Pocket
- Change, a top-secret plan to retrieve the airmen. It was the
- only postwar rescue the U.S. government ever considered in Southeast
- Asia. The leads that Americans might be at the camp "were the
- best we ever got," says retired Vice Admiral Jerry Tuttle, the
- man in charge of the Defense Intelligence Agency's hunt for
- POWS in 1980.
- </p>
- <p> After the war ended in 1975, reports kept trickling into the
- CIA's Bangkok station that Americans had been seen among the
- prisoners working on Laotian road and irrigation projects. In
- 1979 a Laotian informant for the DIA named Phimmachack claimed
- that 18 Americans had been moved to a cave north of Nhommarath.
- He identified one of them as Lieut. Colonel Paul W. Mercland,
- but no Mercland was listed as missing. There was, however, a
- Lieut. Colonel Paul W. Bannon who had been shot down over Laos
- in 1969. Pentagon intelligence analysts suspected Mercland was
- a garbled version of the word American, erroneously assumed
- to be the officer's last name. Phimmachack passed a polygraph
- test, and satellite photos analyzed in the Pentagon confirmed
- the cave's location.
- </p>
- <p> That information, coupled with W/1's November report, convinced
- some Pentagon intelligence experts that Americans might be at
- the camp. On Dec. 30, according to a CIA cable from Bangkok,
- a Thai signal unit called Team-213 alerted the Bangkok station
- that it had intercepted a radio message from a top Laotian military
- leader ordering American POWS to be flown from the southern
- province of Attopu to central Laos. In the same cable, the CIA
- dismissed the report as fabricated, on the grounds that Team-213
- was poorly trained and had not made a tape of the intercept.
- </p>
- <p> But Pentagon officers who had worked with the Thai unit considered
- the report an important bit of evidence. DIA documents say the
- National Security Agency confirmed that a plane had left Attopu
- on the day reported. Another CIA cable from Bangkok said the
- agency's source in Vientiane, W/1, had delivered a similar report:
- "starving" prisoners were being moved out of the province because
- the Laotians were worried that "foreigners" might detect them.
- </p>
- <p> These reports convinced the DIA's Tuttle, who had served as
- a naval aviator in Vietnam, that American POWS were still alive
- in Laos. He was also persuaded by a Dec. 30, 1980, satellite
- photo of the camp that showed a large "52" carved on the ground
- near the compound's perimeter. He thought it might mean B-52
- for a bomber crew. Photo interpreters also pointed to what they
- believed was a "K," a standard distress signal pilots on the
- ground used, next to the 52. Other analysts who have seen the
- photo subsequently argue that the 52 was simply an accidental
- image, caused by shadow or vegetation. But a Feb. 23, 1981,
- DIA memo said satellites photographed the camp for a month,
- and the 52 was always visible in the same place.
- </p>
- <p> Burned by the failure of the Desert One attempt to rescue U.S.
- hostages in Tehran the year before, senior military officers
- were in no mood to try again in Laos. But never before had photographic,
- electronic and human intelligence all pointed to one site where
- POWS might be alive. National Security Adviser Richard Allen
- was convinced and relayed the evidence to President Ronald Reagan.
- The camp was in a remote jungle, and any rescue attempt would
- be risky, Allen warned. But, he says, Reagan was eager to try.
- </p>
- <p> The CIA was ordered to provide the necessary intelligence. Spy
- satellites watched the camp 24 hours a day. At one point, according
- to a CIA source, the agency considered kidnapping a Nhommarath
- guard to sweat him for information but rejected the idea as
- too dangerous.
- </p>
- <p> In January 1981, the Joint Chiefs of Staff told the super-secret
- Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), which oversees counterterrorist
- units like the Delta Force, to devise a rescue operation. Tuttle
- says the DIA built a tabletop-size model of the Laotian camp
- based on satellite photos and took it to Fort Bragg in North
- Carolina to help the JSOC with its planning. Members of the
- Delta Force say the commandos then planned to construct a full-scale
- mock-up in the Philippines to practice its raid; as cover, it
- would pretend to be a Hollywood company shooting a commando
- movie. The JSOC sent intelligence officers to scout a remote
- airstrip in Thailand, where cargo planes carrying MH-6 helicopters
- would land to stage the airborne assault. Officers then in the
- unit say the plan was to have about 40 Delta commandos swoop
- down on the camp, armed with machine guns, breaching charges
- and chain saws to cut through doors.
- </p>
- <p> But before the JSOC's Brigadier General Dick Scholtes would
- risk the lives of his troops, he insisted that Delta conduct
- its own reconnaissance to confirm that American POW's were really
- at Nhommarath. According to former CIA officials, the agency
- argued that it should carry out any ground reconnaissance since
- Americans would stand out in the Laotian jungle, and Washington
- needed to retain plausible deniability. CIA officials demanded
- that Laotians on their payroll carry out the mission. National
- Security Adviser Allen sided with the CIA after the officials
- assured him there would be at least one American accompanying
- the team to view the target.
- </p>
- <p> Allen now says he regrets that decision because the CIA's reconnaissance
- team performed poorly. No Americans were included. The team
- was led by a former Royal Laotian Air Force pilot with no commando
- experience; his main qualifications for the job seemed to be
- that the CIA trusted him and he was familiar with the Nhommarath
- area. The team's radios were antiquated. CIA and Delta Force
- officials say agency staff members who went to a Chicago mountaineering
- shop to outfit the team with climbing equipment purchased white
- rope; JSOC officers sent them olive-green rope that would not
- be spotted in the jungle.
- </p>
- <p> Operation Pocket Change was supposed to be one of the Pentagon's
- most secret missions. But the Joint Chiefs of Staff did not
- want to repeat the mistake made in the Desert One fiasco when
- senior Pentagon officials kept too many key officers in the
- dark. Tuttle says he was ordered by the Chiefs to expand the
- circle of officers informed about this operation. On March 18,
- members of the congressional POW task force were briefed on
- the Nhommarath sightings. The result was a flood of leaks to
- the press. Colonel Ronald Duchin, then head of the Pentagon's
- news division, says he had to persuade half a dozen news organizations
- to hold their stories until the operation was over.
- </p>
- <p> On March 29, the 13-man CIA reconnaissance team crossed the
- Mekong River into Laos and almost immediately ran into trouble.
- According to CIA officials monitoring the team at the time,
- Laotian army patrols pinned it down for more than a week. One
- member accidentally shot himself. Another fell ill and had to
- be evacuated. Though Nhommarath was just 40 miles from the Thai
- border the team took more than a month to reach the suspect
- camp and finally returned safely to Thailand on May 13. A week
- later, say CIA documents, the agency reported to the Pentagon
- that the team had spent two days at the camp observing about
- 160 prisoners, but none were Caucasians.
- </p>
- <p> By then Duchin had learned the Washington Post was planning
- to print its story about the proposed rescue raid. He says he
- conferred with senior Pentagon officials on May 20 to see if
- they had any objection, and they did not. Duchin told Post editors
- that they could go ahead.
- </p>
- <p> The story, which reported that a CIA team had visited a Laotian
- camp but turned up nothing, appeared on May 21. Duchin sensed
- that senior civilian officials in the Pentagon were almost relieved
- that the story was out, and the CIA reconnaissance had proved
- nothing. "Nobody was eager to launch this operation," he recalls.
- The Pentagon reacted to the Post story by closing the entire
- operation down.
- </p>
- <p> But inside the military special-operations community, the debate
- continued over whether the brass had been scared off too soon.
- Congressional staff members looking into the aborted mission
- two years ago learned that the CIA team had spent only two hours
- actually observing the camp, not two days as the agency first
- reported. The team leaders quickly snapped photographs from
- positions at least 500 yds. from the camp's perimeter, and most
- turned out to be blurry; they saw none of the prisoners believed
- to be housed in an inner compound before they were frightened
- away by barking guard dogs. The entire operation, Allen now
- concludes "was a flat-out failure. We missed the best chance
- we ever had to find POWS still alive."
- </p>
- <p> Last February Laos finally let a Pentagon team into the country
- to inspect the Nhommarath prison. Americans in the party say
- nervous Laotian officials rushed them through their tour of
- the camp and gave them little time to read the prisoner logs.
- No photographs were allowed. Investigators were permitted to
- interview only two elderly villagers from Nhommarath who claimed
- they never saw POWS. The team had to report back that there
- was "no evidence" Americans had been held there.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-