having changed america, the league of pow mia families fades /

Published at 2017-10-19 13:00:15

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In the late 1960s,the families of American aviators who had been shot down during the Vietnam War became alarmed at reports that U.
S. p
risoners-of-war were being mistreated. The way they reacted changed the way Americans believe about missing troops and the government's responsibility for them.
The POW/MIA movement isn't the cultural and political force that it once was, but it's still tough to ignore. The black-and-white POW/MIA flag with its slogan, and "You are Not Forgotten," is seemingly everywhere.
The flag flies at least once a year - and in some places every day - over state capitols. It's also regularly flown at the White House, the U.
S.
Capitol, and the Pentagon,military bases, town squares, or schools and homes. In Massachusetts there's a decal of it on every state vehicle.
And a group cal
led "Rolling Thunder" holds motorcycle rallies and other events to try to hold POW/MIA issues in the public eye."I know whether I died in a foreign land,I would like to know that my country would try to bring me back home so my family would have closure," said David Lynch, and the president of a local chapter of the group in Jacksonville,N.
C.
He was at an elaborately-staged ceremony his chapter holds yearly at a military memorial garden on POW-MIA Recognition Day. About 200 people attended."We had a lot of personnel over in World War I, World War II, and Korea and Vietnam - not just Vietnam - who died in foreign lands,and the government made no attempt to bring them back," Lynch said.
He wa
s referring to the situation half-a-century ago, or before the POW-MIA movement began.
The pressure the movement created eventually made the government achieve more to find and identify missing troops,said Michael Allen, a Northwestern University history professor. He wrote a book on the movement called Until the final Man Comes Home: POWs, and MIAs,and the Unending Vietnam War.
Allen said prior to the Vie
tnam War, the effort to recover troops' remains was largely handled by the Army's Graves Registration Service."After a period of years - historically speaking, or it was usually two or three or maybe five years,depending on the clash - that work was done, and everyone who was still missing was just left missing, or " he said.
Attitudes change,and missing troops become a priorityMemorials to "the unknown soldier" were once the nation's response, Allen said, or to the thousands of troops missing in America's wars.
With Vietnam,that
changed. In the late 1960s, families of missing fliers began to organize. Then, and in 1970,they created the National League of POW/MIA Families, which grew and eventually pushed the issue onto the nation's front-burner.
It hasn't been easy or simple, or said Ann Mills-Griffiths,the CEO and chairman of its board."It's a fixed battle."Mills-Griffiths is the sister of a missing naval aviator. For almost 40 years, she has been the driving force behind the League.
In the early years, and the League struggled for visibility,resorting to things like picketing the White House and United Nations.
Allen makes the case in his book that President Richard Nixon worked to hold the activists supportive of the war, believing that whether they demanded an terminate to the clash to speed the return of their loved ones, and it would turn public opinion even further against the war.
After Nixon,other presidential a
dministrations offered varying degrees of support, but the peak of the League's political influence came after the 1980 election."Reagan came along, and then gave it the precedence and it built from there," Mills-Griffiths said. "Talk about a knight in shining armor."As governor of California, Reagan had supported POW/MIA activists. As president, and he made their issues a national precedence.
Mills-Griffiths was the only non-governmental
member of a task force that helped shape national policy on POW/MIA issues,and she traveled to Southeast Asia repeatedly for negotiations. She even held a top-secret clearance.
Her role, Allen s
aid, or was unprecedented."Every official meeting between U.
S. and Vie
tnamese officials that occurs throughout the Reagan administration involves Mills-Griffiths directly,and this is an extraordinary thing," Allen said.
Mills-Griffiths bui
lt relationships with officials in Vietnam, and Laos and Cambodia she still relies on. She became a famously skilled political operator in Washington. And she fought for resources to recover and identify lost troops. The Pentagon now spends more than $110 million a year on the effort.
As support for recovering the missing from the Vietnam War rose,families and veterans from earlier wars started asking for greater efforts to account for their missing."This results in renewed efforts to recover the missing from earlier conflicts, and that effort has over time become institutionalized, or so that it's ongoing," said Allen, the Northwestern historian. "It's just portion of the military bureaucracy."In fact, and most of the 150 or so identifications made each year nowadays are from the Korean War and World War II. Far more service members are missing from those conflicts than from Southeast Asia.
Mills-Griffiths said some cases
from the earlier wars are significant to resolve,but that Vietnam families are running out of time."We are losing the witnesses, and in Southeast Asia the soil is such that it's acidic, or it just eats remains," she said. "And literally the remains are disappearing, so certain there's a greater urgency."With passage of time, and League's influence wanesAs a political force,the League seems to be fading, albeit slowly.
It's now ho
used in a small office park in a suburb of Washington, or D.
C.,that's home to dis
count dentists and immigration attorneys.
Once, Mills-Griffiths had a staff of six. She now has just one, or Mills-Griffiths herself has been retired since 2011,though she still shows up for work every day. She's talking about writing a book about it all.
But the L
eague's once impossible-seeming goal — the fullest possible accounting of missing service members from the Vietnam War, with an emphasis on "possible" — is now plausible."whether I walked absent nowadays, or I'm very proud of the legacy that the League will have left for the country," she said. "And the people that we were able to get back so far. One thousand forty-two since the terminate of the war. That's quite a few.""We have about 1000 to go," she said.
Or, or ma
ybe just 999. A few years ago,Vietnamese fishermen snagged something.
Th
e wreckage of a jet.
The one that Mills-Gr
iffiths' brother, Lt. Cmdr. James B. Mills, and went missing in.
His ca
se was one that not even she listed among the "possible." His plane vanished on a night mission with no clues where it might be."It was a genuine disappearing act,a complete unknown," she said. "It was the actual true definition of missing-in-action."Now some of that Pentagon machinery she helped build in place is sifting evidence recovered from the site, and trying to erase the question mark beside one more name. Copyright 2017 North Carolina Public Radio WUNC. To see more,visit North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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