TEXT: DEFENSE DEPARTMENT RELEASES VIETNAM POW/MIA DOCUMENT
(Hanoi not forthcoming on certain POW/MIA matters)

Washington -- The U.S. Department of Defense has declassified and released a key document concerning U.S.-Vietnam POW/MIA accounting efforts, according to an August 27 Defense Department press release.

The document, "Vietnamese Intentions, Capabilities, and Performance Concerning the POW/MIA Issue," was originally published in classified form in April but was declassified and released so it could be shared with family members, veterans and family organizations.

While the report rates Vietnam's performance as generally improved with respect to the U.S. POW/MIA issue, its authors think Hanoi has not been completely forthcoming on certain POW/MIA matters.

"In some instances, we believe full disclosure would prove embarrassing to the regime. For example, Hanoi continues to deny that U.S. POWs were mistreated while in captivity in the North," the report says. "We think Vietnam still has records it could make available to U.S. investigators but which would discredit its denials of mistreatment."

The document also notes that a few reports of transfers of U.S. POWs to Russia and other countries are unexplained, and the books remain open.

Following is the text of the Defense Department news release and the document:

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OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (PUBLIC AFFAIRS) WASHINGTON, D.C. 20301

August 27, 1998

POW/MIA DOCUMENT DECLASSIFIED AND RELEASED

A key document used by the Department of Defense in its POW/MIA accounting efforts has recently been declassified.

The Key Judgments of National Intelligence Estimate 98-03, Vietnamese Intentions, Capabilities and Performance Concerning the POW/MIA Issue, discussed Vietnam's cooperation with the U.S. government on the POW/MIA issue. It was published in classified form in April by the National Intelligence Council, a senior staff serving the director of central intelligence, policymakers and senior military officials.

Mr. Robert L. Jones, deputy assistant secretary of defense for POW/Missing Personnel Affairs, requested that Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet declassify the NIE so it could be shared with family members, veterans and family organizations. The declassification of the Key Judgments NIE 98-03 will enhance the public's understanding of U.S.-Vietnamese cooperation on this important issue.

A copy of the document is attached.

Vietnamese Intentions, Capabilities, and Performance Concerning the POW/MIA Issue

Key Judgments

Since the early 1990s, we have seen evidence for increased Vietnamese cooperation on the POW/MIA issue in the strengthened staffing, increased responsiveness, and growing professionalization of the Vietnamese organizations that deal with this issue.

-- In our view, Hanoi judges that closer ties to the United States are in Vietnam's own security and economic development interests, and that normalization requires progress on the POW/MIA issue.

-- U.S. financial support for cooperative action and willingness to agree to reciprocity on Vietnamese humanitarian concerns also encourage cooperation. Consequently, we judge that Vietnam has become more helpful in assisting U.S. efforts to achieve the fullest possible accounting of American personnel missing in action during the Vietnam conflict. On the issue of recovering and repatriating remains of U.S. personnel, we rate Vietnamese cooperation as excellent. Cooperation also has been good on assisting with trilateral investigations and providing documents (see table).

We think the decision to be more cooperative with the United States on POW/MIA accounting has not come easily to the Vietnamese leaders. Longstanding ideological distrust, lingering animosity from the war, suspicion of American motives and fear of intelligence exploitation all have operated at times to limit Vietnam's willingness to cooperate on recovering or accounting for U.S. MIAs. But our reporting suggests that the POW/MIA issue no longer has the political sensitivity it once had.

Incidents of outright refusal to cooperate with U.S. investigators have decreased, but instances in which the Vietnamese raise objections to POW, MIA activities still remain. In most cases, the Vietnamese cite considerations of sovereignty-for example, in refusing to make internal Politburo documents accessible to U.S. investigators; security, such as not allowing U.S. officials to enter classified locations and facilities; or technical problems, such as difficulty in locating documents or records. Occasionally the Vietnamese state that local villagers are concerned about the intrusive nature of investigations and recovery activities.

Summary Evaluation:

Vietnamese Cooperation with the United States on POW/MIA Accounting

Element                      Level of             Comments
                             Cooperation

Joint field activities;      Excellent       Has been improving since
recovery and repatriation                    early 1990s; increasing
of remains                                   professionalism on part of
                                             Vietnamese

Assisting with trilateral    Good            Vietnamese working hard
investigations to obtain
Laotian cooperation in
recovery efforts

Providing documents,         Good            Vietnamese have provided
personal artifacts,                          numerous documents but
and equipment                                probably are holding out
                                             on those that would
                                             embarrass the government

Making officials available   Fair to Good    Some retired officials
for interviews                               resist interviews

Live sightings               Reluctant, but  Vietnamese resent live-
                             cooperation     sighting investigations
                             still           and question their
                             reasonably      utility
                             good

Transfer of POWs to the      Uncertain       Vietnamese say none were
Soviet Union                                 transferred but issue
                                             remains open

Moreover, although Vietnam's performance generally has improved with respect to the U.S. POW/MIA issue, we think Hanoi has not been completely forthcoming on certain POW/MIA matters:

-- In some instances, we believe full disclosure would prove embarrassing to the regime. For example, Hanoi continues to deny that U.S. POWs were mistreated while in captivity in the North.

-- We think Vietnam still has records it could make available to U.S. investigators but which would discredit its denials of mistreatment.

-- A few reports of transfers of U.S. POWs to Russia and other countries are unexplained, and the books remain open.

Although 120 live-sighting investigations have been carried out by U.S. teams, none has generated any credible evidence of American POWs left in Vietnam. Hanoi protests having to investigate such cases, but reports appear regularly -- most recently on five POWs possibly being held in Laos -- and established procedures for resolving them continue to be in effect.

Although Vietnam's overall performance in dealing with the POW/MIA problem has been good in recent years, the unresolved issues noted above suggest the need for continued close attention by the U.S. Government.

We assess continued progress in POW/MIA accounting will require overcoming two types of obstacles:

-- Technical problems, such as difficulty in retrieving archival materials, contacting leads, and conducting field activities by the Joint Task Force-Pull Accounting (JTF-FA), are more amenable to resolution than political obstacles. Not all can be overcome -- the passage of time and geographic change increase the difficulty of recovery operations -- but some can be resolved through improving technology, maintaining U.S. financial support, and continued professionalization on the part of the Vietnamese.

-- Overcoming political obstacles -- such as Vietnam's sensitivities about infringements on its sovereignty and obstructionist tendencies on archival research and live-sighting reports -- will be more difficult. In the past, Vietnam has reacted best to straightforwardness combined with respect and U.S. acknowledgment of Hanoi's own MIA accounting efforts.

We have reviewed the so-called 1205 and 735 documents, which purport -- falsely in our view -- to be reports to the party leadership containing statements that Hanoi held large numbers of U.S. POWs above those acknowledged to the United States. We believe the judgments in the 1993 Department of Defense (DOD) assessment remain valid: that the documents are probably authentic GRU-collected documents (Soviet Military Intelligence). But many of the details of the documents, including dates and other facts, are implausible or inconsistent with reliable evidence. In particular, the numbers of POWs allegedly held by Hanoi at the times mentioned are inconsistent with reliable U.S. Government statistics and far outnumber the actual total of open cases. We believe that neither document provides a factual foundation upon which to judge Vietnamese performance on the POW/MIA question.

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