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    Leaders Pledge Support to Bring Missing Service Members Home

    Leaders Pledge Support to Bring Missing Service Members Home

    Photo By Fred Baker | (Front) John Meyers, Maryland state commander for American Ex-Prisoners of War, and...... read more read more

    WASHINGTON, DC, UNITED STATES

    09.19.2008

    Story by Fred Baker 

    Office of the Secretary of Defense Public Affairs           

    By Fred W. Baker III
    American Forces Press Service

    WASHINGTON - On a small parade field at the steps of the Pentagon and across the river from the skyline of the nation's capital, top military and political leaders on Sept. 19, 2008, pledged to continue looking for missing service members no matter the cost.

    "Over the past 230-plus years, a promise has been made to the men and women who wear the cloth of our nation," said Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England. "However long it takes. Whatever it takes. Whatever the cost. No American will be left behind.

    "Every effort and attempt will be made to rescue and recover the captured and fallen and bring them home," England said.

    England joined a small group of senior DoD officials and congressional leaders, service members and civilians, veterans and families who gathered at the river entrance on the east side of the Pentagon for the National POW/MIA Recognition Day ceremony.

    Under partly cloudy skies, the short ceremony was packed with troops decked out in military dress uniforms, their chests full of glittering medals. Veterans donned their association caps. A handful of ex-POWs dotted the crowd with red jackets and hats poked with medals and unit insignia. Veteran bikers sported patriotic leathers. A cool breeze unfurled the brightly colored flags and streamers covering the grassy parade field as a military band belted out traditional tunes.

    Marine Gen. James E. Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the crowd his first military memories as a child were associated with those service members still not home from the Korean War.

    More than 8,000 still are missing.

    Cartwright said that in high school and college, he wore bracelets bearing the names of those not yet home from Vietnam. Some 1,800 service members still are missing from the Vietnam War.

    So for the families of those and the other 79,000 U.S. service members still listed as missing, and to those serving in the two wars now, the nation's second-highest-ranking military officer offered a promise.

    "We have a solemn pledge that everyone comes home," Cartwright said. "For families who sacrifice so much, and give their treasures, the youth of this nation, we have a debt to ensure that, no matter what, we will do everything within our power to ensure that everyone comes home."

    U.S. Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri said that those who sign up to serve expect some hardships – tough training, time away from families and combat. But those who are captured and held have had to endure beyond those expectations.

    "Our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines who have been captured and held prisoner of war have experienced hardships we can barely imagine and frequently even they cannot bear to share with anyone," Skelton said.

    Skelton traveled in 1978 on a delegation to Vietnam to bring home the remains of 14 American soldiers killed in the war there.

    "It was an experience I will never forget," he said.

    The congressman praised DoD efforts to recover and identify those still missing, especially the efforts of the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, based in Hawaii.

    One of a handful of offices within the Defense Department charged with recovering missing service members, the JPAC is based in the U.S. Pacific Command and conducts 80 percent of its missions there. The command has 350 military and civilian staff members. Its research and recovery teams deploy on about 70 missions a year.

    On any given day, investigative and recovery teams are deployed in some of the most remote regions around the world. Their work takes the teams deep into jungles and to the tops of mountains. They work on sites for up to two months at a time, taking on inhospitable living conditions, rough weather, poisonous snakes and insects and unexploded ordnance. Nine Americans have died in those missions.

    "It's impossible not to admire the skill, dedication and professionalism of those who work to bring our servicemembers home to their families," Skelton said.

    Skelton pledged continued support for the DoD's efforts to recover and identify missing servicemembers to "ensure our nation never forgets."

    The congressman said nothing can repay the service members and their families for their sacrifices.

    But, "as a nation, we can and we must thank them for their willingness to pay the price required to ensure the nation's freedoms," he said.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.19.2008
    Date Posted: 09.19.2008 19:01
    Story ID: 23882
    Location: WASHINGTON, DC, US

    Web Views: 79
    Downloads: 63

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