Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

North Korea-U.S. summit may reopen MIA issue

Nearly 7,800 U.S. troops remain unaccounte­d for from the Korean War. About 5,300 were lost in North Korea.

- By Eric Talmadge

TOKYO — More than six decades after the troops died for their country, the repatriati­on of the remains of thousands of U.S. military personnel missing in action and presumed dead from the Korean War may finally get a boost now that President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are expected to hold the first-ever summit between their countries.

Nearly 7,800 U.S. troops remain unaccounte­d for from the Korean War. About 5,300 were lost in North Korea.

Efforts to recover and return the remains have been stalled for more than a decade because of the North’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons and U.S. claims that the safety of recovery teams it sent during the administra­tion of President George W. Bush was not sufficient­ly guaranteed.

There are indication­s, however, that Trump may raise the issue directly with Kim when they meet. There is also a chance Kim might return some remains even before the summit. The location and date of the summit have yet to be announced, though officials have suggested the meeting should take place by the end of May.

“Hopefully, the North Koreans will turn over some remains as a goodwill gesture before the summit,” said Bill Richardson, a former U.N. ambassador and New Mexico governor who secured the return of six sets of remains from North Korea in 2007. “This would help enormously to diffuse some tension.”

Frank Metersky, a Korean War veteran and a leading advocate of efforts to recover the remains with Korea Cold War Families of the Missing, one of three main support groups for families of service personnel missing in action, said he has been told by administra­tion officials dealing with the matter that it is tentativel­y high on the summit agenda.

“The MIA issue, recovery of remains from the Korean War, is the third item on the list if they get to it,” he said by phone from New York. “If the meeting takes place and they get past the nuclear and missile issues, it’s the third item on the agenda.”

Trump’s decision to meet Kim has come under criticism amid skepticism over whether he will be able to negotiate a nuclear deal with the North.

An agreement from Kim to return remains or allow future search missions would allow Trump to claim a concrete success. Hopes are high that Kim might also be willing to release three Americans of Korean descent it is now holding in custody for what it calls “anti-state” activities.

According to the Pentagon’s Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, most of the missing Americans died in major battles or as prisoners of war. Others died along the wayside or in small villages. Many of the losses from aircraft crashes also occurred near battle zones or roads connecting them.

North Korea and the United States remain technicall­y at war because the 1950-53 fighting ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. But between 1996 and 2005, joint U.S.-North Korea military search teams conducted 33 joint recovery operations and recovered 229 sets of American remains.

Washington officially broke off the program because it claimed the safety of its searchers was not guaranteed, though the North’s first nuclear test, in 2006, was likely a bigger reason. Critics of the program also argued the North was using the deal to squeeze cash out of Washington, calling it “bones for bucks.”

Talks to restart recovery work resumed under President Barack Obama in 2011, only to fall apart after North Korea launched a rocket condemned by the U.S. as a banned test of ballistic missile technology. There has been essentiall­y no government-to-government progress since.

Richard Downes, president of the Coalition of Families of Korean and Cold War POW/MIAs, said the North had expressed a willingnes­s to return remains as recently as 2016, when he traveled to Pyongyang as a private citizen with a non-profit headed by Richardson.

The passage of time is making recovery efforts more difficult.

In 2016, the AP visited a site about 100 miles north of Pyongyang where villagers have buried what they claimed to be dozens of sets of remains that were unearthed during the constructi­on of the Chongchon River No. 10 Hydroelect­ric Power Station.

The villagers collected the remains that had been dug up, put them in large burlap bags and buried them in three separate places on a nearby hill overlookin­g a valley that was to be flooded as part of the constructi­on project.

 ?? WONG MAYE-E/AP 2015 ?? A North Korean villager digs up a sack that he says holds the remains of a soldier who fought in the Korean War.
WONG MAYE-E/AP 2015 A North Korean villager digs up a sack that he says holds the remains of a soldier who fought in the Korean War.

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