看看这个网站,我不相信美国政府会不善待这些失踪人员

来源: tz2000 2019-12-11 15:07:48 [] [博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读: 0 次 (130771 bytes)
本文内容已被 [ tz2000 ] 在 2019-12-11 15:10:55 编辑过。如有问题,请报告版主或论坛管理删除.

https://www.dpaa.mil/Our-Missing/Korean-War/Korean-War-POW-MIA-List/

 

Korean War Accounting Efforts on the Peninsula

Korean War Personnel Accounting main lines of effort:

  • Repatriation of U.S. remains recovered by, and under DPRK controlOn July 27, 2018, the Korean People’s Army of the DPRK turned over 55 boxes of remains to UN officials in accordance with a commitment for repatriation as agreed upon in a Joint Statement signed by President Trump andChairman Kim during the June 2018 Singapore Summit. On several occasions in the past, the DPRK officials have indicated they possess as many as200 sets of remains they had recovered over the years. A definitive number has never been confirmed.
  • Identification of remains already recovered and under U.S. control. Remains recovered during and/or shortly after the Korean War that could not beidentified were buried as unknowns in 866 graves at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific (NMCP). There is one set of unknown remains fromthe Korean War buried at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery. To date, 346 unknowns buried in the NMCP have been disinterred byDPAA, or its predecessor organizations; 142 have been identified and others are undergoing analysis at DPAA’s Laboratory in Hawaii using forensic anthropology, odontology, sampling for DNA, and other scientific methods.
  • Investigative and remains recovery operations in the ROK and the PRC. Approximately 950 personnel are missing in the ROK and fewer than 20 are known to be missing in the PRC. DPAA continues to work with both partner nations on these efforts.
  • Joint Field Activities (JFAs) in the DPRK. JFAs consist of investigative and recovery operationsJFAs consist of investigative and recoveryoperations. The DoD conducted 33 JFAs in the DPRK from 1996 through 2005. The Secretary of Defense is authorized to reimburse costs associatedwith efforts to recover remains, but does not pay for remains or information.  Also included in the Singapore Joint Statement was the commitment to recover remains. Although yet to be scheduled, if DoD-Korean People’s Army negotiations to consider the resumption of field operations were to besuccessful, included would be planning and logistical discussions.
  • Korean War-era archivesDoD continues to conduct archival research in the United States, the ROK, Russia, Eastern Europe, and the PRC. DoD hasalso conducted research in North Korean archives, and currently there is an arrangement with the PRC for the People’s Liberation Army to search its military records for information on U.S. personnel, in particular since Chinese Communist Forces administered and operated the POW camps in NorthKorea for most of the war.
  • Oral history programs in the U.S., ROK, Russia, and the PRCDoD periodically interviews Korean War veterans in the United States, the ROK, Russiaand the PRC. These efforts are designed to obtain information that will help determine the circumstances of loss for missing servicemen; build DoD’sknowledge base of Korean War loss incidents; and gain eyewitness accounts of prison camp life and prisoner movements.
  • Live Prisoner Issue. Finding live U.S. personnel is a high priority of our accounting effort, when and if information is reported claiming a sighting of a liveU.S. person still held from the Korean War. The Department of Defense (DoD), with the full support of the U.S. Intelligence Community, has investigatedall credible reports and sightings of alleged U.S. survivors of the Korean War in North Korea.  Since 1995, more than 25,000 defectors from the DPRK have been screened for information concerning U.S. personnel possibly in the North.  To date, this effort has produced no useful information.  Most reports pertain to six known U.S. military defectors.  Of the six defectors, five are reported to have died in the North, and one, Sergeant Jenkins, nowdeceased, was returned to U.S. control in 2004.

1 This is a working number from the Personnel Missing Korea (PMKOR) list; approximately 5,300 lost in the DPRK.
2 208 boxes of remains received from DPRK, many of which were commingled; possibly 400 remains in the 208 boxes.
3 55 boxes of remains received from the DPRK on July 27, 2018, it is likely there may be more than 55 separate individuals represented.
4 Original estimate of 866 sets of Unknown remains located in NMCP when exhumations began in 1999. The Total displayed represents disinterred caskets to date.

 

请您先登陆,再发跟帖!

发现Adblock插件

如要继续浏览
请支持本站 请务必在本站关闭/移除任何Adblock

关闭Adblock后 请点击

请参考如何关闭Adblock/Adblock plus

安装Adblock plus用户请点击浏览器图标
选择“Disable on www.wenxuecity.com”

安装Adblock用户请点击图标
选择“don't run on pages on this domain”