In a remote valley in Vietnam, US investigators sift through piles of red soil. Despite recovering the remains of hundreds of fallen troops, the hunt goes on for many more still missing in a race against time.
With witnesses aging, acidic soil eating into remains, and rapid development encroaching on areas where troops died during the Vietnam War, investigators warn there is little time left before all evidence is lost.
In May 1968, explosions shook the now-quiet valley in a battle around the Kham Duc Special Forces Camp in Quang Nam province — an hour-long helicopter ride over green, terraced paddy fields from Danang airport, a former US base.
More than 40 years later a joint US-Vietnamese recovery team is hunting for the remains of those who were lost — and must find them before all traces disappear.
“We most often find bits of metal fragments — the area was heavily bombed. About 90 percent of what gets found (bone fragments and other remains) comes through the sieves,” the team’s anthropologist, Mindy Simonson, said.
In Kham Duc, Vietnamese workers in a long line pass buckets of earth from a shallow pit neatly marked out with twine to the “evidence station” where it is sifted through dozens of large sieves.
Nearly 60,000 American soldiers died in the Cold War-era conflict, which also claimed the lives of up to three million Vietnamese civilians and soldiers before ending in 1975 with Vietnam’s reunification.
When the guns fell silent, 1,971 Americans were left unaccounted for, according to figures from the US Joint Prisoners of War, Missing in Action Accounting Command (JPAC), which handles the search for MIAs. Since then, 687 have been identified and repatriated and 586 are listed as “no further pursuit,” meaning it is not possible to recover their remains. But JPAC is still hunting for about 700 missing individuals. “It is no secret that the remains being recovered from most of the sites in Vietnam these days are fragmented and small,” said JPAC’s Ron Ward. “Remains are being lost to acidic soil, scavenging and land development.”
The search is now a “race against time,” he told AFP, but added there is “light at the end of the tunnel.” “We are relatively close to completing the majority of the excavations,” Ward said. At the Kham Duc dig, the team was guided by a younger, local witness who had stumbled upon the site while scavenging for scrap metal. “Witness” is the term used for people who know where the sites are.
Usually witnesses are elderly — another factor JPAC is “racing against,” said Lt. Col. Patrick Keane. In many cases it is former soldiers who come forward with information. “The Vietnamese witnesses are getting exceptionally old and we’re losing those first hand witnesses. Once you lose a first hand witness, your ability to actually close a case... pretty much comes to an end,” Keane told AFP.
Moreover, as Vietnam develops, more and more land is being turned into roads, hotels or coffee plantations.
“The third and fourth quarter of last year, every site we went to was in imminent danger” due to development, said Keane, the head of JPAC’s operations in Vietnam.
The fact that remains are so fragmented and being eaten away by acidic soil makes it harder for JPAC scientists to do a positive DNA identification — essential if a case is to be closed, he said.
When pressed on how long it would be until evidence disappeared, Keane said it was impossible to talk about exact timescales as there were many variables.
“There’s no way to say ‘well, in 6.2 years all the bones will be gone’. It’s just we understand it is a concern, and it is something that we’re racing against to ensure that we do find enough remains for the laboratory to be able to execute some sort of scientific (analysis).”
“The other factor that is important to us is we have mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, and children who are all waiting for word on their loved ones, and they’re all getting older,” he added.
Hanoi says about 300,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are still listed as missing from the war. The number of South Vietnamese MIAs remains unclear. The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the US organization says the hunt must continue whatever the cost.
Race against time to find US MIAs in Vietnam
Race against time to find US MIAs in Vietnam
