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Remains of US pilot missing 18 years in Iraq found
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 02 - 08 - 2009


The remains of the first American lost
in the Gulf War have been found in Iraq, the military said
Sunday, a sorrowful resolution of a nearly two-decade-old
question about the fate of Navy Capt. Michael «Scott»
Speicher, according to AP.
The Pentagon said the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
on Saturday positively identified the pilot's remains,
buried in the desert and located after officials received
new information from an Iraqi citizen about a crash.
Speicher's disappearance has bedeviled investigators since
his fighter was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first
night of the 1991 Gulf War.
The top Navy officer said the discovery is evidence of the
military's commitment to bring its troops home. «Our Navy
will never give up looking for a shipmate, regardless of
how long or how difficult that search may be,» said Adm.
Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval Operations.
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.
The Pentagon initially declared Speicher killed. But
uncertainty _ and the lack of remains _ led officials over
the years to change his status a number of times to
«missing in action» and later «missing-captured.» The
family Speicher left behind, from outside Jacksonville,
Florida, continued to press for the military to do more to
resolve the case.
Speicher's story has never waned in that city. A large
banner flying outside a firefighters' credit union has a
photo of him with the words: «Free Scott Speicher.» At
his church, a memorial was put up in his honor and the
swimming complex at his alma mater, Florida State
University, was named for the pilot.
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.»
Laquidara said the family would have another statement
after being briefed by defense officials; she did not know
when that would be.
More than a decade after Speicher was shot down in a
combat mission, the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003
finally gave investigators the chance to search inside
Iraq. That led to a number of new leads, including the
discovery of what some believed were the initials «MSS»
scratched into the wall of an Iraqi prison.
The search also led investigators to excavate a potential
grave site in Baghdad in 2005, track down Iraqis said to
have information about Speicher and make numerous other
inquiries in what officials say was an exhaustive search.
Officials said Sunday that they got new information last
month from an Iraqi citizen, prompting Marines stationed in
the western province of Anbar to visit a location in the
desert which was believed to be the crash site of
Speicher's FA-18 Hornet.
The Iraqi said he knew of two other Iraqis who recalled an
American jet crashing and the remains of the pilot being
buried in the desert, the Pentagon said.
«One of these Iraqi citizens stated that they were
present when Captain Speicher was found dead at the crash
site by Bedouins and his remains buried,» the Defense
Department said in a statement.
The military recovered bones and multiple skeletal
fragments and Speicher was positively identified by
matching a jawbone and dental records, said Rear Adm. Frank
Thorp.
He said the Iraqis told investigators that the Bedouins
had buried Speicher. It was unclear whether the military
had information on how soon Speicher died after the crash.
Some had said they believed Speicher ejected from the
plane and was captured by Iraqi forces, and the initials
were seen as a potential clue he might have survived. There
also were reports of sightings.
While dental records have confirmed the remains to be
those of Speicher, the pathology institute in Rockville,
Maryland, is running DNA tests on the remains recovered and
comparing them with DNA reference samples previously
provided by family members.
«Our thoughts and prayers are with Captain Speicher's
family for the ultimate sacrifice he made for his
country,» Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said in the Pentagon
statement. «I am also extremely grateful to all those who
have worked so tirelessly over the last 18 years to bring
Captain Speicher home.»
Speicher was shot down over west-central Iraq on Jan. 17,
1991.
Hours after his plane went down, the Pentagon publicly
declared him killed. 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.
A review in 2005 was conducted with information gleaned
after Baghdad fell. The review board recommended then that
the Pentagon work with the State Department, the U.S.
Embassy in Baghdad and the Iraqi government to «increase
the level of attention and effort inside Iraq» to resolve
the question of Speicher's fate.
Last year, then Navy Secretary Donald Winter ordered yet
another review of the case after receiving a report from
the Defense Intelligence Agency, which tracks prisoners of
war and service members missing in action.
Many in the military believed for years that Speicher had
not survived the crash or for long after. Intelligence had
never found evidence he was alive, and some officials felt
last year that all leads had been exhausted and Speicher
would finally be declared killed.
But after the latest review, Winter said Speicher would
remain classified as missing, despite Winter's strong
reservations about the pilot's status and cited
«compelling» evidence that he was dead.
Announcing his decision, Winter criticized the board's
recommendation to leave Speicher's status unchanged, saying
the review board based its conclusions on the belief that
Speicher was alive after ejecting from his plane. The board
«chose to ignore» the lack of any parachute sighting,
emergency beacon signal or radio communication, Winter
said.
Speicher's family _ including two college-age children who
were toddlers when Speicher disappeared _ believed more
evidence would surface as Iraq became more stable.
One of Speicher's 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.
Jensen said the group was frustrated the military didn't
initially send a search and rescue team after the crash,
and then grew more perplexed as reports of his possible
capture emerged. «Never again will our military likely not
send out a search and rescue party for a downed
serviceman,» Jensen said.
Sen. Bill Nelson, a Florida Democrat, had pressed several
years ago to get the military to renew a search for
Speicher and he once visited the Baghdad prison cell where
it was thought Speicher may have carved his initials in the
wall.
«We all clung to the slim hope that Scott was still alive
and would one day come home to his family,» Nelson said
Sunday.
The new informant told officials in Iraq of another
possible location of Speicher's grave a site very near
where his shattered airplane was found in 1993, Nelson said
in a statement Sunday.


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