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- Message-ID: <199212211545.AA24259@peora.sdc.ccur.com>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 10:45:10 -0500
- Sender: Southeast Asia Discussion List <SEASIA-L@MSU.BITNET>
- From: Nhan Tran <tran@PEORA.SDC.CCUR.COM>
- Subject: NEWS/VN: US senator says VN visit make significant progress
- Lines: 62
-
- 12/19
-
- U.S. SENATOR SAYS VIETNAM VISIT MADE SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS
-
- By Adrian Croft
- SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 19, Reuter - A U.S. senator on Saturday said his latest
- trip to Vietnam had brought significant progress in obtaining information on
- American servicemen missing from the Vietnam War.
- Senator John Kerry, who heads a Senate committee looking into prisoners of
- war (POWs) and missing in action (MIA) from the conflict, said the Vietnamese
- authorities had handed over all documents the panel had requested on an earlier
- trip, and more.
- "We're getting more than we've ever gotten before...more documents, with
- more photographs, shoot-down documents, documents that previously they denied
- they had," Kerry, a Vietnam veteran, told reporters at San Francisco airport
- during a stopover on his flight back from Vietnam.
- The senator said the Vietnamese had also for the first time acknowledged
- they had information about what happened in Laos where many American pilots
- were shot down during a secret war to cut off North Vietnamese supply lines.
- The Vietnamese had previously said all questions about American servicemen
- missing there should be directed to Laos, while Laos had said they should go to
- Vietnam, Kerry said.
- "For the first time on this trip, Vietnam said: 'Yes, we've got some
- documents about what happened in the Laos area and we're going to try to find
- them and get them to you'," he said.
- Kerry said the committee had received some documents about downings of
- American aircraft over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, some of them containing
- pilots' names and pictures.
- Kerry said he and the committee's vice-chairman, Senator Bob Smith who
- accompanied him on the two-day visit, had also won a Vietnamese pledge of
- access to POW files.
- "We sat down and talked to people who were in the prisons interrogating our
- own people," Kerry said. "No one can say to me this is not a very significant
- step."
- He said he had left 38 cases of missing American servicemen with the
- Vietnamese and asked them to investigate.
- In a memorandum signed during the visit, Vietnamese authorities agreed to
- make available to American experts all information on POWs and MIAs.
- They also agreed to search their files for information on Americans lost or
- captured along the Ho Chi Minh Trail and to follow up on reports Americans had
- been sighted alive in Vietnam.
- Kerry said Vietnamese officials were adamant that all American servicemen
- captured alive were returned in 1973.
- "They can't speak to Laos. Laos remains a bigger question," he said.
- However, the senator said neither his Senate committee nor the U.S.
- government had evidence any American serviceman was alive in the region today.
- The Senate committee will present a report on January 5 on its year-long
- investigation into the cases of 2,264 Americans unaccounted for after the war.
- Responding to scepticism about the results of the investigation expressed
- by the families of some MIAs, Kerry said he thought they "ought to really not
- shoot from the hip but look hard at what we're getting because what we're
- getting is real and it's different."
- Kerry, who has visited Vietnam five times in the last 18 months, said no
- new visit to Vietnam was scheduled but said he planned to personally take some
- family members and veterans' groups to Vietnam.
- Discussing the gradual normalisation of U.S.-Vietnamese relations Kerry
- said that "as the U.S. finds that the Vietnamese are acting in good faith we
- need to also act in good faith...and move down the road step by step towards
- the ultimate goal of a better relationship."
- He said President George Bush eased the U.S. trade embargo on Vietnam last
- Monday in response to Vietnamese actions. "Now the ball is back in Vietnam's
- court," Kerry said.
-