San Francisco Chronicle

Memorial speaks to North Korea’s ties to summit

- By Hau Dinh and Grant Peck Hau Dinh and Grant Peck are Associated Press writers.

BAC GIANG, Vietnam — In a rice field in northern Vietnam, 14 headstones are an enduring symbol of the wartime friendship of Vietnam and North Korea. They mark the original burial ground of North Korean pilots who died while secretly fighting alongside Vietnamese comrades against U.S. Air Force and Navy planes during the Vietnam War.

The role of North Korea is a footnote in the sweeping history of that conflict, one that speaks mostly of the fraternal relations of two nations that separately fought bruising armed conflicts against the U.S. in the context of the Cold War. Decades later, the communist nations’ friendship is apparent as Vietnam gets ready to host the second summit between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un next week.

“When they died, Vietnamese people treated them the same as Vietnamese martyrs who sacrificed for the country,” said Duong Van Dau, caretaker of the memorial. On the high ground where the fallen pilots were interred, their tombs all face northeast, toward their homeland.

South Korea’s role in the war is much better known. From 1964 to 1973, Seoul deployed more than 300,000 military personnel to help the U.S. effort in South Vietnam.

By contrast, the North Korean air force contingent deployed near Hanoi in what was then called North Vietnam — the communist half of the war-torn Southeast Asian nation — had 200-400 personnel, including about 90 pilots over more than two years, according to postwar Vietnamese accounts.

In September 1966, according to Vietnamese historical documents obtained and translated by CIA analyst turned scholar Merle Pribbenow, Hanoi accepted an offer by Pyongyang to send three companies of pilots who would form a regiment equipped with 30 aircraft in total. They were to wear North Vietnamese uniforms and Vietnam would provide the aircraft, facilities and equipment.

It was timely assistance. Vietnam’s fleet of aging Russian-made MiG-17 fighters was taking heavy losses defending against the U.S. bombing campaign against North Vietnam, Operation Rolling Thunder. The number of trained Vietnamese pilots was shrinking by attrition.

“Although they fought very bravely in the aerial battles, they were generally too slow and too mechanical in their reactions when engaged, which is why so many of them were shot down by the Americans,” said Vu Ngoc Dinh, one of the Vietnamese pilots who served alongside the Koreans.

In 2002, the remains of the pilots were repatriate­d from Vietnam to North Korea in a ceremony held by the military of both countries. But the headstones remain, lined up in two rows behind a memorial marker with an inscriptio­n in Vietnamese: “Here used to lie 14 North Korean comrades.”

 ?? Hau Dinh / Associated Press ?? War veteran and memorial caretaker Duong Van Dau walks among a row of headstones of North Korean pilots in Bac Giang province. The pilots died while fighting American bombers.
Hau Dinh / Associated Press War veteran and memorial caretaker Duong Van Dau walks among a row of headstones of North Korean pilots in Bac Giang province. The pilots died while fighting American bombers.

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