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Status of Gulf War pilot still unknown
(EXCERPT) By Robert Burns Associated Press WASHINGTON — U.S. investigators searching in Iraq for clues to the fate of missing Navy pilot Michael Scott Speicher, shot down on the opening night of the 1991 Gulf War, have returned to an early hypothesis: that he died at or near the site where his F-18 fighter crashed. A later theory — that he was captured alive and imprisoned in Baghdad — has been largely dismissed, based on postwar interrogations of Iraqi officials, searches of the prison system and assessments of Iraqi government documents, defense officials familiar with the search said. The idea that Speicher was a prisoner gained currency after intelligence reports in the late 1990s cited claims by Iraqi sources that an American pilot was being held in Baghdad. Upon closer examination since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime those claims have unraveled, officials said. Defense officials said investigators have not abandoned the search in Baghdad or reached any conclusion about Speicher's fate. But they have found nothing so far to support the theory that Speicher had been held alive in an Iraqi prison. This has taken investigators back to the theory that if he survived the shootdown Jan. 17, 1991, over west-central Iraq, then he most likely died there shortly afterward. Some of the documents found since the fall of Baghdad indicate that Iraqi government officials were befuddled by continuing U.S. government inquiries about the possibility of Speicher being held alive. U.S. investigators deduced from this that the Iraqis had no knowledge of Speicher being held. That is consistent with Iraq's public position from the start. The Iraqis asserted that Speicher had died in the crash, but they never produced his remains. In March 1991 the Iraqis returned a small amount of human remains and identified them as a pilo... U.S. and friendly nation laws prohibit fully reproducing copyrighted material. In abidance with our laws this report cannot be provided in its entirety. However, you can read it in full today, 31 Aug 2003, at the following URL. (COMBINE the following lines into your web browser.) The subject/content of this report is not necessarily the viewpoint of the distributing Library. This report is provided for your information and discussion. http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/ar.../mn/mn03a.html --------------------------- Otis Willie Associate Librarian The American War Library http://www.americanwarlibrary.com |
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