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[wphoto6.txt 07/20/91]
PHOTO OF THREE MIAS IS FRAUDULENT, OFFICIAL SAYS...
Seattle Times 07/20/91
Times news services
The Pentagon tentatively has concluded that the grainy photo graph
that seems to show three U.S. fliers .....including Air Force Col.John
Leighton Robertson of Seattle..... missing from the Vietnam War, is
fraudulent, a senior White House official said yesterday.
"There's no final conclusion and there may never be one," the official
said. "But (the Department of ) Defense is inclined to believe that
it's not authentic."
Release of the photograph showing three men holding a sign with the
date May 25, 1990, has fueled continuing speculation that some
American prisoners of war may still be alive and imprisoned.
The POW-MIA group that obtained the photo identified the men as
American fliers who were shot down on bombing missions in the late
1960s and declared killed in action.
The bodies of the three --- Robertson, Air Force Maj. Albro Lynn Lundy
Jr., and Navy Lt. Larry James Stevens --- have never been found.
The White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said
that the United States often receives "evidence" of surviving MIAs
that has been manufactured in hopes of profit. The POW-MIA group
didn't reveal the source of the latest photo. One copy of it was given
to a Denver woman who visited the region in October and another to a
Texas woman at a Thai refugee camp in Dec.
"We see a lot of this stuff," the official said. "There's a kind of
counterfeit industry over there (in Southeast Asia) because of these
rewards --- $200,000, $300,000."
In other MIA -- related developments yesterday:
1. The Pentagon acknowledged yesterday that a set of bones claimed by
the Vietnamese government to be remains of Robertson are "nonhuman,
mammal remains." But as he confirmed statements made by Robertson's
family, Cmdr. Ned Lundquist, a Pentagon spokesman who specializes in
POW-MIA affairs, said military researchers still believe the flier was
killed when his F-4C crashed nearly 25 years ago in North Vietnam.
Despite the government's inability to identify the remains said to be
Robertson's a team of U.S. researchers who interviewed villagers near
where the pilot's aircraft crashed con cluded that he did not survive,
Lundquist said.
2. Army Gen. John Vessey has agreed to meet regularly with veterans
groups to share information on U.S. servicemen missing in action in
Southeast Asia. Vessey is President Bush's special envoy on POW and
MIA issues. "I hope this move will be a small step toward
reestablishing some credibility between the Defense Depart ment and
POW-MIA families who have suffered for years in a process that is
sometimes less than open and helpful," said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
3. President Bush will ask Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev for help
in accounting for American soldiers held in the Soviet Union after
World War II, Rep. John Miller, R-Wash., said yesterday. Miller said
he was assured by Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagle burger that
Bush has the question on his agenda for his meeting with Gorbachev in
Moscow.
Miller, who made the request to Bush on Wednesday, said the Soviets
after World War II held thousands of American soldiers, many of them
former prisoners of war in German camps overrun by the Red Army. There
also have been several reports of American POWs being shipped to the
Soviet Union after the Korean and Viet nam wars. "I've been very
careful to never say that I believe people are still alive today. I
have no evidence of that, " he said.
" What I do believe, because there is substantial convincing evi
dence, is that literally thousands of Americans were alive after World
War II in Soviet hands and were not returned, and that a lesser number
were probably in Soviet hands after the Korean War and were not
returned," Miller said. "I think the relatives of these people want to
find out what happened. Of course they hope some are alive, but even
if they are not alive, they would still like to know how they died,
where they died. It would remove some of the anxiety and frustration,"
he said. In April, President Gorbachev hand-delivered to the Japanese
government Soviet re cords revealing the names of nearly 60,000
Japanese POWs who died while in Soviet captivity, Miller said.
Compiled from Los Angeles Times, Newsday, Boston Globe and Associ ated
Press
[distributed through the P.O.W. NETWORK]