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Allied Servicemen Missing Since Iraq War

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Sands hid fate of Gulf War pilot lost since ’91
Speicher’s disappearance in Iraq had bedeviled investigators for 18 years

The remains of Navy Capt. Michael "Scott" Speicher, an F/A-18"Hornet" pilot who was shot down over Iraq on the opening night of Operation Desert Storm in January 1991, have been positively identified.
updated 8:43 p.m. ET Aug. 2, 2009


WASHINGTON - Navy pilot Capt. Michael "Scott" Speicher was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the Gulf War in 1991 and it was there Bedouins apparently buried him, hidden in the sand from the world's mightiest military all these years.

In a resolution to the nearly two-decade-old question about his fate, the Pentagon disclosed Sunday it had received new information last month from an Iraqi citizen that led Marines to recover bones and skeletal fragments — enough for a positive identification.

His family issued a statement Sunday saying, "The news that Captain Speicher has died on Iraqi soil after ejecting from his aircraft has been difficult for the family, but his actions in combat, and the search for him, will forever remain in their hearts and minds."

President Barack Obama called the news "a reminder of the selfless service that led him to make the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom."

"My thoughts and prayers are with his family, and I hope that the recovery of his remains will bring them a needed sense of closure," Obama said in a statement issued Sunday.

Former President George H.W. Bush, who was commander in chief in 1991, said, "We already knew he was a hero, one who helped lead our way to a historic victory in the Gulf, but now his family and countrymen know — and history will finally record — that he was one of the very first patriots to give his life in the liberation of Kuwait."

Shot down over west-central Iraq on a combat mission in his FA-18 Hornet on Jan. 17, 1991, Speicher was declared killed by the Pentagon hours later. Then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney went on television and announced the U.S. had suffered its first casualty of the war.

But 10 years later, the Navy changed his status to missing in action, citing an absence of evidence that Speicher had died. In October 2002, the Navy switched his status to "missing/captured," although it has never said what evidence it had that he ever was in captivity. More reviews followed, without definitive answers.

'This whole thing has been so surreal'

The family Speicher left behind, from outside Jacksonville, Fla., continued to press for the military to do more. A high school classmates who helped form the group "Friends Working to Free Scott Speicher" said Sunday his biggest fear was that Speicher had been taken alive and tortured.

"This whole thing has been so surreal for all of the people who have known Scott," said Nels Jensen, 52, who now lives in Arkansas.

Over the years, critics contended the Navy had not done enough, particularly right after the crash, to search for the 33-year-old Speicher. A lieutenant commander when he went missing, Speicher later reached the rank of captain because he kept receiving promotions while his status was unknown.

Family spokeswoman Cindy Laquidara said relatives learned on Saturday that Speicher's remains had been found. "The family's proud of the way the Defense Department continued on with our request" to not abandon the search, she said. "We will be bringing him home."

Sands hid fate of Gulf War pilot lost since ?91 - Military- msnbc.com
 
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Iraqi's childhood memories solved pilot mystery


An Iraqi Bedouin's dim childhood memories led US authorities to the long-sought remains of a US Navy pilot shot down over Iraq in 1991 during the first Gulf War, a US Senator said Wednesday.Democratic Senator Bill Nelson said the "mystery" surrounding Captain Michael Speicher's fate unraveled thanks to a tribal nomad, a child at the time of the conflict, "remembered a pilot being buried."The man "couldn't identify the location, but knew of another Bedouin who was an adult at the time, and that Bedouin ultimately led the Marines to the site," the Florida lawmaker said on the floor of the US Senate.

The Pentagon announced Sunday that Speicher's remains had been identified, nearly 19 years after his F/A-18 Hornet was shot down over west-central Iraq on January 17th, 1991 during Operation Desert Storm.His fate had long remained a mystery, with some believing that the pilot was being held prisoner by then Iraqi president Saddam Hussein. Acting on a tip from local Iraqis, US Marines stationed in the western Iraqi province of Al-Anbar in July recovered human remains from a desert grave and flew them to the United States for identification.

ASIAN DEFENCE: Iraqi's childhood memories solved pilot mystery
 

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