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- THE WEEK, Page 13NATIONProgress at Last
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- Looking for rapprochement, Vietnam promises new POW/MIA evidence
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- For the families of American soldiers and pilots missing in
- Southeast Asia, the announcement was as stunning as the orange
- sunrise bathing the Rose Garden Friday morning. President Bush
- announced that "Hanoi has agreed to provide us with all, and I
- repeat all, information they have collected on American pows and
- mias." Confirming a report that first appeared in TIME's Oct.
- 26 issue (Grapevine), Bush called the acquisition of more than
- 5,000 black-and-white photos of American POW/MIAS from the
- Vietnam era a "significant, real breakthrough" in determining
- the fate of the 2,265 Americans still not fully accounted for.
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- Supplementing Bush's statement, retired General John
- Vessey, the President's personal MIA/POW representative, just
- back from Hanoi, produced new photos and a Memorandum of
- Understanding in which Vietnamese officials agreed to "make
- available all museums that may contain U.S. MIA archival data"
- and promised access to display cases, microfiche files and other
- materials. "The important thing is not the material we brought
- back," Vessey emphasized. "The important thing is the material
- we expect to get."
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- Bush made it clear that Hanoi's cooperation will open the
- way toward re-establishing diplomatic relations, broken off in
- 1975, and lifting the economic embargo that has helped keep
- Vietnam's economy in desperate shape. Bush said U.S. officials
- got their first glimpse of Vietnam's war archives last summer.
- None of the new information provided any leads to possible live
- Americans. The President cautioned that "we may never know" the
- fate of all the POWs and MIAs.
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