Hunt for U.S. Korean War dead will take
months to resume, search chief says
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[July 11, 2018]
By Tim Kelly
TOKYO (Reuters) - North Korea may allow the
United States to resume a search for thousands of American war dead from
the 1950-53 Korean War, but it will be months before excavations can
begin and years until bone fragments are identified, a senior US
official said.
"It takes anywhere from a few months to, in many cases, years, before we
can make an identification," Kelly McKeague, head of the U.S. agency
that tracks down remains of U.S. soldiers lost on foreign battlefields,
said in an interview.
Thirteen years after its last work in North Korea, the agency could
return after leader Kim Jong Un agreed at a June 12 summit with
President Donald Trump to resume the recovery and repatriation of U.S.
remains.
After the summit, Trump said Pyongyang had already "sent back" the
remains of 200 U.S. troops. McKeague said no new remains had been
returned since the Trump-Kim talks.
"We have yet to see any specifics from that commitment," said McKeague,
director of the U.S. Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA).
The process could get a kickstart when North Korean and United Nations
officials meet on Thursday in the demilitarized zone (DMZ) that divides
the Koreas to discuss service members missing in action (MIA). DPAA
advisers will attend the talks.
"We are hopeful these discussions on July 12 will lead to further
discussions and negotiations directly with the North Koreans by which we
can actually get down to the detailed planning," McKeague said.
DPAA investigators face a narrow weather window in North Korea, where
the ground is soft enough for digging from mid-March to late September,
and rains can stop work in June and August.
The last return of U.S. remains between 1990 and 1995 involved just over
200 caskets. U.S. investigators collected a further 230 boxes of bones
and material in a decade of digging.
Using DNA testing, they have identified 630 individuals, of which 330
were matched to missing service members, said Dr. John Byrd, the
agency's director of scientific analysis.
Each person receives a military funeral with full honors.
WORKING IN THE NORTH
Byrd, a forensic anthropologist, was part of a 15-strong DPAA team in
North Korea 20 years ago. They lived in tents and traveled to battle
sites such as the Chosin Reservoir, where outnumbered U.S. Marine and
Army units fought a retreat through overwhelming numbers of Chinese
forces in a bitter winter.
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U.S. Defence POW/MIA Accounting Agency Kelly McKeague, whose agency
tracks down and repatriates remains of U.S. soldiers lost on foreign
battlefields, speaks at an interview with Reuters in Tokyo, Japan,
July 9, 2018. Picture taken on July 9, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Guarded by North Korean soldiers, Byrd said they were careful to
avoid arguments that could halt their work.
"We made sure we only brought in really mature experienced people,"
he said, adding each day was "going to be negotiated".
The remains of a South Korean service member identified from that
operation will be returned in Seoul on Friday. About 350,000 South
Koreans are still missing.
Some 7,700 Americans are unaccounted for on the peninsula, with
5,300 believed to be somewhere north of the DMZ.
Detailed historical records allow investigators to locate
battlefields, prisoner of war camps and aircraft crash sites.
The Korean peninsula's colder climate limits digging time, but helps
to preserve remains, unlike tropical areas of Asia, where bones rot
quickly, McKeague said.
The agency has built up a DNA database from relatives that covers 92
percent of the Korean War missing, versus 85 percent for the Vietnam
War and 3 percent for World War Two.
The North's lack of economic development since the war ended in a
truce, not a peace treaty, meant it built fewer roads, dams and
buildings to disturb or cover remains.
South Korea's urbanization is one reason why more than a 1,000 U.S.
service members are unaccounted for, said McKeague.
If the agency does return to North Korea, he said cooperation will
be key. "The most difficult thing in working with the North Koreans
was the trust," he said.
(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Darren Schuettler)
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