Today's excerpt.
THE STORY
I was pregnant with my first child when this story began with an episode I produced for CBS TV News's 60 Minutes.
Soon my daughter will be six years old.
I am aghast at how she has gone through so many stages since I produced that segment about men who might be dead or alive.
For Americans who are among the missing, though, whole lifetimes have passed.
Their children are fully grown.
My 60 Minutes report, aired during the Christmas season of 1985, looked at the possibility that U.S. government spokesmen were not telling the whole truth about men and women of the armed forces being left behind in Vietnam when they said that there was no credible proof that prisoners had been kept by the enemy.
President Richard Nixon had promised, on January 23, 1973, that with a ceasefire imminent “all American prisoners-of-war [POWs] throughout Indochina will be released" with "the fullest possible accounting for all those who are missing-in-action [MIAs]."
MIAs are American servicemen who were involved in specific battles with the enemy, but who were not acknowledged officially to have been either killed in action (KIA) or taken prisoner by them.
In many cases, I found later, their capture and imprisonment was monitored by U.S. intelligence.
I had stirred up a hornets’ nest.
From all over the United States, and later from abroad, came letters and telephone calls from Vietnam veterans, families of the missing, and serving officers who said they were relieved that finally a powerful news outlet had the courage to deal with a great national scandal.
The last thing I had in mind while preparing the television news-magazine segment was to expose an American scandal.
I was so innocent that when I got calls from a National Security Council colonel in the White House to drop the story, weeks before I had completed the necessary interviews, I failed to take his threats seriously.
My knowledge of Vietnam was limited to what I had read in the newspapers at the time (much of it forgotten) and to wearing a POW bracelet while I was a student at the University of Wisconsin.
The emotional impact went no further than my distress over the disappearance of my friend Lance Sijan, a Phantom pilot who behaved with incredible heroism after he was shot down near Hanoi.
For me, "the longest war in American history" had no clearly defined beginning or end.
However, when I began to research the story, I found that much of the background of the POW/MIA issue was already on the record.
There were said to be 2,497 unaccounted for by the 1980s, but the figure fluctuated.
I quickly learned that President Nixon's promise had not been kept.
When prisoners were officially released in the early months of 1973 the enemy gave virtually no accounting of the missing in action.
The North Vietnamese released 591 men — far less than anyone expected.
Among those unaccounted for were prisoners lost during the secret war in Laos.
It had been a long though unacknowledged war.
When French rule ended in 1954, the enemy had used terrorism and treachery.
He routinely exploited neutral territories in Laos and Cambodia to smuggle weapons into South Vietnam — against international agreements.
But the U.S. had responded in kind since 1958, six years before Congress passed the 1964 Tonkin Gulf Resolution that formalized U.S. entry into Vietnam.
The secret "war" in Laos continued throughout the Vietnam conflict.
In January of 1973, just before the Vietnam peace accords were signed, the Pentagon books carried the names of 317 men missing in Laos.
At the same time U.S. government spokesmen were quoted as saying they believed the number was much higher.
The Communist Pathet Lao spokesman, Soth Petrasy, told reporters that the Pathet Lao had a detailed accounting of prisoners and where they were being held.
He insisted that they would be released only if there was a separate truce agreement between Laos and the United States.
Some headlines of the day tell the story:
“Pathet Lao says no truce, no American POWs,”
“Fate of U.S. POWs still a mystery,"
and “U.S. demands list of POWs in Laos.”
But the Pathet Lao, were not part of the negotiations for the release of prisoners.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger insisted to the public that prisoners in Laos would be returned by Hanoi.
He maintained this stance despite the fact that Bui Tin, chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese, also insisted the United States must deal for prisoners held in Laos with the Pathet Lao.
Tin said, “We clearly reiterate our position that the question of persons captured in Laos is within the sovereign power of Laos and beyond the competence of the four part joint military commission."
Despite evidence to the contrary, Kissinger said he had been told there were no POWs in Cambodia.*
Just before the release of the last group of prisoners from Hanoi after peace terms in March of 1973, the Pathet Lao, in a statement laced with undertones of malice, agreed to the release of nine Americans captured by the Vietcong in Laos.
Their agreement was redundant.
All nine had been captured by, and were in the hands of, the North Vietnamese.
No single prisoner captured by the Pathet Lao was ever released.
On April 14 Roger Shields, the Pentagon's Prisoner of War Task Force chief, said “there were probably no more live American soldiers loose anywhere in Indochina."
Families of the missing claim it was a statement he would later say had been forced on him.
Shields said, further, that there was no evidence that any POWs (with three exceptions) had been executed during the war years.
So where were the 371 and possibly more men known by the U.S. government to have been captured by the Pathet Lao?
There was no answer from any of the governments involved.
The families of these men had become alarmed when, on June 8, 1973, a North Vietnamese defector named Nguyen Thanh Son surfaced.
He told AP, UPI, and NBC correspondents that he had seen six prisoners.
He believed they were Americans who had not yet been released.
An American officer present at the interview requested that news services play down the details.
Soon after I began questioning families of MIAs about this press conference, I received a copy of a State Department declassified telegram which persuaded me that the National Security Council move to stop my story was not the first time attempts had been made to silence the media.
The telegram, sent from the U.S. embassy in Saigon to Washington, said, “In follow on [defector Nguyen Thanh Son]... AP mention was consistent with embargo request, while UPI and NBC after talk with embassy press officer omitted item entirely from their stories."
Missing from the group of men who were returned by the North Vietnamese were over fifty men known by the U.S. government to have been captured and held prisoner at one time or another.
Beyond that there was a large number of men suspected of having been captured by the North Vietnamese.
Many returning prisoners had seen such men being taken captive or displayed to Vietnamese villagers, but they had never been seen in the prison system.
I would learn later that the U.S. government had a list of over one thousand such men — a list that included detailed knowledge of their capture, physical condition, and whereabouts until 1975, when Saigon fell.
The United States was able to obtain such information on its prisoners through electronic eavesdropping and its extensive network of Vietnamese agents.
Other prisoners who were not acknowledged were all those whose existence had not been verified by returning prisoners.
According to some intelligence analysts who tracked prisoners, the U.S. government knew that many were kept in remote prison camps, although it listed such men in the MIA category.
Some of those prisons and camps were especially geared for technical talents — highly skilled American servicemen who had expertise in fields like electronic warfare, about which the North Vietnamese and their Soviet and Chinese allies needed information.
Some of those special talents were put to work in highly secret North Vietnamese war projects; others were farmed out to the Soviet Union or China.
Amputees, the emotionally disturbed, and other seriously maimed prisoners were kept in special camps from which not one prisoner returned.
Most astounding, some prisoners were actually hidden in the main prison compounds in Hanoi.
One such man, Air Force Colonel Norman Gaddis, who was shot down on May 12, 1967, did appear on the 1973 list of returnees — unexpectedly.
He had never been accounted for by the Vietnamese.
Yet for almost four and a half years he was kept in a section of the prison known as “Heartbreak Hotel".
In all that time no other American prisoner had seen him.
If he had not finally been spotted by other prisoners after the Vietnamese moved POWs and consolidated them in several key locations because of the attempted Son Tay raid to rescue prisoners on November 21, 1970, Gaddis would probably have ended up an MIA.
I learned of another group who never came home.
Hearing of 60 Minutes’ plan for a segment on MIAs, a few families contacted me about a subject they had held close to their hearts for twelve years.
Their men had been sent on missions, primarily in Laos and Cambodia, after the peace accords were signed on January 27, 1973.
Some of these men had voiced their objections to base commanders, because they feared that if they were caught by the enemy in contravention of the Geneva Agreements, they would be charged as war criminals.
The families who came to me had excellent intelligence information that their men had not been killed in action but had been captured.
After the ceasefire, the U.S. had demanded from the Vietnamese and the Laotians lists of all prisoners on their records.
It was made clear that the Vietnamese were expected to return all prisoners captured by their allies.
I was shocked when I was told that some of those prisoners, captured in Laos after the ceasefire and known by the U.S. negotiating team, through the efforts of U.S. intelligence eavesdroppers, to be alive and in captivity, were first pencilled in on the list of prisoners that were demanded from the Vietnamese and then crossed off.
To acknowledge them would have meant acknowledging the continuing involvement of the United States in covert wars in Laos and Cambodia.
I was told by the families that some Department of Defense officials were so disturbed by this that they registered their objections in writing.
Those documents, I was told, were classified.
It was easy for me to understand why the Pathet Lao would continue to hold prisoners who had not been negotiated for by the U.S. government or who were caught in contravention of the peace agreements.
It was harder to understand why the Vietnamese would hold on to prisoners after the peace was signed.
Then I learned this was not the first time the Vietnamese Communist government had kept prisoners long after a conflict ended.
French POWs were sold for many years after the French-Indochina war, for cash and other concessions.
They were called “pearls.”
A former foreign service officer in Vietnam, considered to be one of the foremost experts on the French POW/MIA experience, testified before a 1976 House Select Committee that two hundred French POWs were released by the Vietnamese some eleven to fourteen years after the war.
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam had never admitted holding them.
She suggested to the Committee that American government representatives speak to the Vietnamese not about prisoners, but about deserters, or better yet “war criminals,” since the Vietnamese had categories for such men, but none for prisoners.
The French had paid an unrevealed but supposedly large sum for French remains and the maintenance of French graves and cemeteries in Vietnam, she said.
It seemed that the U.S. government had expected to bargain for prisoners, but somewhere along the road, abandoned the idea.
Article 20 of the Peace Agreement stated:
The United States anticipates that this agreement will usher in an era of reconciliation with the Democratic Republic of Vietnam as with all the peoples of IndoChina.
In pursuance of its traditional policy, the U.S. will contribute to healing the wounds of war and to post war reconstruction. . . ."
President Nixon reinforced that pledge with a secret promise of four and one half billion aid dollars in a letter to Prime Minister Pham Van Dong on February 1, 1973.
That letter was not released until four years later.
The promise of reconstruction aid was never kept, largely because Congress, angered by reports from returning prisoners of war of torture and mistreatment by Hanoi, would never grant such aid.
Because of Watergate and his attendant resignation, Nixon lost all possibility of arranging fund transfers from other programs.
The promises that were not kept rankled the Vietnamese Communists.
Time and again they were to hint during negotiations that the prisoner issue was tied to the promised reconstruction aid.
Over the next twelve years, scores of Vietnamese refugees told stories of prisoners who were held back as “pearls,” but who were never bargained for by the U.S. government.
There were stories that the Vietnamese aired statements made by U.S. government officials who claimed there were no more prisoners in Southeast Asia, in order to humiliate and torture prisoners who had been left behind.
The fact that prisoner returns were intimately connected to payment of reconstruction funds was clearly understood by the 1976 House Select Committee on Missing Persons in Southeast Asia.
On December 13 of that year the members concluded their report, Americans Missing in Southeast Asia, with the following statement:
That the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has called for selective implementation of the Paris Peace Agreement specifically article 21 dealing with American reconstruction aid to Vietnam in exchange for POW/MIA information under article 8b. (p. 239).
Over the years that knowledge received little attention from committees on Capitol Hill.
Perhaps lawmakers were too busy, but it seemed to some families as if a war of attrition was being waged against the men who had been left behind.
No matter how much solid intelligence was obtained that men were alive and imprisoned in Vietnam, some government official or committee would find a way to negate it — even when those intelligence chiefs in charge of the issue declared that they too believed men to be alive and imprisoned in Indochina.
What started as possibly an error of judgment, or an act of political expediency, grew with the passing years into a conviction that national security would be hurt by the disclosure that U.S. intelligence capabilities, which were formidable, had failed to serve the men who fight.
Hundreds of refugees reported seeing American prisoners in all parts of Communist Southeast Asia in the early postwar years.
Some of those refugees had spent time in prison with Americans.
A few of them took their responsibility to report what they had seen seriously enough to testify under oath before congressional committees.
Analysts at the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), often took seriously one part of a witness's testimony only to debunk that part having to do with live men.
For example, in the early eighties a former Vietnamese colonel of Chinese descent testified in disguise before a congressional committee about a warehouse of remains of over four hundred Americans in the heart of Hanoi.
He explained the Vietnamese would coldheartedly pull out some of those remains and return them to the United States when diplomatic concessions were required.
The colonel, known as “The Mortician," passed lie-detector tests, and his story about the remains became part of DIA formal history.
Yet a retired DIA official told me that The Mortician had been just as truthful about live prisoners.
He had testified that he personally saw groups of prisoners on numerous occasions before he fled Vietnam in 1979.
That part of his testimony, even though he had passed all interrogations and lie detector tests with flying colours, was determined to be a fabrication.
There was an effort to steer anyone with an interest away from the subject of living men.
It took me a long time to see that the issue was larger than the roughly 2,500 MIAs admitted to by the U.S. government.
My real education began after the 60 Minutes broadcast.
The show had presented two sides of an argument.
One was that there was no credible evidence that anybody had been left behind from among loyal, serving Americans.
This was the government case, but officials covered themselves by adding, “If any are still there, getting them back is a priority — unless they're deserters and traitors."
The opposing view was that our intelligence on prisoners was voluminous but never put to use: two highly qualified Special Forces men said the intelligence was suppressed.
My husband had many friends in the military and intelligence.
So did I.
He also had a great deal of experience in Southeast Asia.
He could assess the growing complaints reaching my office that secret intelligence was not serving those it was meant to serve.
Vietnam marked the blossoming of covert warfare.
If the men who fight these wars cannot depend on the intelligence services, they have justification for asking awkward questions.
Those who contacted me were driven by anger and concern for the defense of their country.
Their misgivings had crystallized around the POW/MIA issue because many proffered detailed knowledge of how American intelligence on prisoners had never been acted upon.
I might have dismissed their allegations if I had not received those curious NSC threats; and if, after 60 Minutes ran my segment on prisoners, a Pentagon publication had not appeared, exclusively devoted to branding as liars all those who had appeared on the program to state their belief that, based on the best possible current intelligence, prisoners were still being held by the Vietnamese and their allies.
Kinfolk of the missing, and the doubting vets, lacked the resources of a national broadcast-news network.
I could call upon such resources, but I was to experience a milder and briefer version of the nightmare of frustration experienced by these Americans.
Intelligence documents were declassified, then hastily reclassified when the critics pointed out discrepancies and demanded answers.
Some vets with experience in electronic intelligence in Southeast Asia had started to build complex information networks.
By 1989 these networks were described by one former intelligence officer, Colonel Earl Hopper, Sr., as “better than the intelligence resources at DIA" — even though the Defense Intelligence Agency had the task of coordinating all intelligence on the missing.
Colonel Hopper's son, also a colonel, was still among the missing.
The DIA director, through the toughest war years and long afterwards, was Lt. Gen. Eugene Tighe, who told me flatly that he had seen the best possible evidence of Americans still alive.
For speaking out, he was publicly humiliated.
He was not alone among senior officers whose audacity was punished when they failed to toe the official line.
Yet they had to confide to somebody.
They peeled away my innocence.
First I learned never to ask direct questions when mysterious references were made to outfits like ISA, MACV, SOG, CCN, or SLAM.*
Bit by bit, I discovered these were units with roots in a special secret service created in 1958, nominally under the South Vietnamese president, and supported and financed by the Central Intelligence Agency.
I found that intelligence on prisoners had been efficiently collected; so much so that today, more than fourteen years after the U.S. evacuation of Saigon, all Vietnam is laced with grapevines of human intelligence on prison camps — on who is in them, and on who runs them.
Yet despite the intelligence and despite the existence of a special unit designed to rescue them, no American military prisoner was ever officially brought out.
POWs and MIAs seemed to be getting lost in what many military men considered an ever-increasing isolation of intelligence agencies.
A friend of my husband, with intelligence experience going back to World War II, suddenly resigned from the CIA.
He had quarreled with the Director, Bill Casey, the year before Casey died in 1987.
Casey, he said, tampered with intelligence reports, and slanted them to suit White House thinking.
It wasn't in the spirit of the words at the entrance to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, which quoted the biblical promise that "ye shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall make you free."
My husband's friend had held one of the most sensitive posts.
Now he was discarded, implying serious problems in the agency.
This was a difficult conclusion for my husband to reach.
He had liked Casey as CIA director.
A new director, Judge William Webster, appeared before Senate Intelligence Committee hearings on April 8, 1987.
The committee, judging Webster's fitness for the new task, asked him what his philosophy on intelligence might be.
Webster said he could add nothing to what my husband had written in his book A Man Called Intrepid: “Among the increasingly intricate arsenals across the world, intelligence is an essential weapon, perhaps the most dangerous.
Safeguards against its abuse must be devised, revised, and rigidly applied. . . .
The character and wisdom of those to whom it is entrusted will be decisive. . . ."
Americans really have little opportunity to know if they have abdicated a small part of their freedom to people they should trust.
They dutifully refrain from poking their noses into national secrets, confident that those who guard them are doing the best possible job with the greatest integrity.
The armed services, in turn, need the best possible intelligence to carry out their duties.
They deserve first consideration.
If an American is taken prisoner, he should know that he will get the full and non-political attention of his country's formidable intelligence resources.
Admiral William Crowe said at his retirement as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the autumn of 1989, “We need first and foremost the best possible intelligence."
He should have added, "And the integrity to act upon it for the good of all the people."
Without integrity, secrecy can become a license for opportunists to distort and corrupt the system.
It suddenly struck me that, for once, ordinary Americans could get a sense of how effective these intelligence services were from the way the POW/MIA issue had been handled.
My husband knew something about such things.
He had extracted a Canadian fighter pilot from China, where Communist officials swore they knew nothing of the flier's existence.
He had talked to French prisoners in Communist Vietnam, long after Hanoi and Paris jointly agreed that none existed.
What we could not understand, as we went along, was the intelligence bureaucrats’ fear of re-examining their own performance.
Were there deep reasons for hoping the issue would die in time, just as death in time must release all Americans left behind?
Or was it merely a military morale problem?
One ordinary American who felt she could break the usual conventions of secrecy was Ann Holland.
Her husband, Melvin, had vanished at a super-secret base in Laos.
He was not in uniform, and technically there wasn't a war there.
Ann had obeyed all the demands made upon her by the U.S. Air Force officials to stay silent.
Then she discovered that nothing at all was being done for her husband; and she would not be jeopardizing any rescue operations, which she thought were in progress, if she made waves.
She was like a growing number of Americans who gladly surrendered a part of their independence in the interests of "national security," but who decided that, on this issue, they had every right to ask questions in public and demand replies from public institutions.
She wrote me after seeing the 60 Minutes segment: “The pain the families have had to live with. . . . The nights, the sleepless nights . . . I would find my youngest child wandering through the house looking for something.
Looking in closets, cupboards . . . and when I asked what he was looking for, he didn't know...."
Her children have grown up with a ghost for a father.
Ann would write me again: “Two of my sons now serve in the Air Force.
If I quit asking questions now, who will be there for them if their time comes?
This is our country and if the people running it aren't doing their very best, then they need to be reminded of what this country stands for.
We do not leave men behind who gave all they had to give when they were asked, believing we would give all we had to give to get them back."
Not all my sources put things down on paper.
I taped many conversations and to give a sense of just a few of the stories of courageous Americans like Ann, they are quoted to illuminate both the issue of POWs and the abuses of secrecy.
Some of our sources were afraid to be identified.
In the end, however, most decided to risk their careers or harassment, and agreed to let me use their names.
I am not by nature secretive, or cautious.
But since that seemingly innocent entry into a secretive world five years ago, I have learned not to take things at face value.
One of my tutors was Ross Perot, who is much more than a Texan entrepreneur.
He displayed a grim resolve to get to the bottom of the POW/MIA issue from the moment he realized the numbers of prisoners returned in 1973 were inexplicably small.
I called him one day about an inquiry from a "federal government investigator."
The man wanted to question me about possible crimes involving U.S. officials in Southeast Asia.
He gave me his office phone numbers and his official designation.
Perot used his resources to probe.
He called me back.
“If there's such a government department, I'll buy you the biggest steak in Texas,” he said.
Perot had to pay up.
We discovered there was an investigative service buried within the General Accounting Office in Washington, D.C.
It had no authority, though, to dispatch agents to find out what I might know.
I rejected the man, who had asked me to cooperate in “a matter of national security."
He then showed his true colors.
"You'd better be sure to tell the truth in your book," he said.
I had never told him I was writing a book.
So many of our sources had similar stories to tell.
Calls in the night.
Veiled warnings.
I didn't believe them.
Not in the beginning.
In the end, I kept going for the same reason that motivated Ross Perot.
It was "the right thing to do."
It seemed the right thing to do because so many of the POW/MIA families and the veterans of the war had never had the opportunity to tell their side of the story.
Since 1981, the government, including the official organization designed to deal with the issue, had said that the issue of POWS and MIAs had the highest priority, but that there had been no credible evidence of men left alive in captivity that was strong enough to act on.
They had many outlets for telling their side of the story and they had the advantage, because so much of the material on POW/MIAs remains classified.
The secrecy that cloaks the issue has led many people to conclude that there are some in the government who don't want the truth to come out.
The natural question that arises is “Why?”
There are undoubtedly many reasons behind the reluctance of officials to look seriously at the allegations of those most directly involved in the issue.
Some of those responsible have been caught up in bureaucratic inertia, some have acted on directives that they thought were legal and appropriate, others have acted from a moral and professional belief that the POW/MIA issue could be resolved properly only if national-security concerns were paramount, and some have seemed motivated primarily by a desire to defeat Vietnam and its allies in Cambodia, and have tied the POW/MIA issue to the resolution of that situation.
Some have possibly believed that activists might compromise government efforts to get men back — either through rescue missions or relocation.
Some have engaged in Iran-Contra-like activities, demonstrating the same confusion of motives that were revealed during those hearings.
Just as with Iran-Contra, it is almost impossible to say which bureaucrats and which government departments were responsible for specific actions.
However, pinpointing motives and pointing the finger at individuals was never the object of this book.
That is the job of the appropriate government agencies.
We wanted to give voice to those Americans who had not been heard and who seemed to have good cause to criticize and to demand an overhaul of a system that stalled whenever they asked for a proper accounting of their friends and loved ones lost in Southeast Asia.
Get it here.
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