AVAILABLE SOON
When combat ceased across Vietnam, it signaled the start of
a cold war over the Americans left behind. As family members agonized, nearly
2,500 POWs and MIAs had become human pieces in a diplomatic chess match that
outlasted the war itself. Historic accounts, as they happened, are told by a
former Vietnam Marine and CBS News correspondent who covered the complex issue
for more than a decade. U.S. prisoners of war and missing in action were never
forgotten in Southeast Asia. In fact, just the opposite. They were a symbolic,
last battalion of Americans, working in concert with the U.S. government, to
actually win the post-war in Vietnam. Although they could not fight, or even
speak out, the POW-MIA voices were heard through their loyal surrogates:
especially family members, fellow veterans, POW activists, military
investigators, U.S. diplomats and men who were, or wanted to be, president.
Now, almost 40-years after the mass release of POWs by North Vietnam, America
is still trying to locate lost patriots and bring them home. During a crucial
period spanning the 80s and 90s, the hunt for POWs and MIAs was used to
leverage major concessions from the Vietnamese. As a result, tens of thousands
of people were saved and lives improved. The drama unfolded in weary
negotiating sessions, in steamy jungle searches and in Hawaii, where
identification experts stood in a roomful of stretchers trying to piece together
bone fragments. Despite being the most comprehensive manhunt in American
history, the mission remained unsatisfactory for many skeptics who believed
that live Americans were left behind. A former Marine newscaster, who reported
many of these war casualties over the American Forces Vietnam Network, returned
to Vietnam repeatedly as he covered the POW-MIA issue from his home base in
Thailand. In his 44-year journalism career, author Rick Fredericksen has
followed the controversial story in 6 countries, including the pivotal decade
that led to normal relations between the former enemies. Rick is the last
Bangkok Bureau Chief for CBS News.
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