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Old 03-20-2008, 08:41 PM
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Default India to aid U.S. on WWII crash recovery

U.S. military officials are in talks with Indian officials in New Delhi to arrange for the recovery of Army Air Forces bombers which crashed in areas previously deemed unsafe.

Clayton Kuhles, an independent researcher, has identified crash sites in the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which shares borders with China and Burma.

“The Indian government previously could not guarantee or was not willing to guarantee our safety, because of unrest in the area” related to border disputes, said Army Maj. Brian DeSantis, a spokesman for the Joint POW/MIA Accountability Command headquartered in Hawaii. JPAC is the group which investigates and recovers U.S. service members from foreign territory.

The situation changed in January, when JPAC Commander Rear Adm. Donna L. Crisp attended a meeting of the Indo-U.S. Defense Policy Group in Washington, D.C. There Crisp laid out a plan to discuss how recovery efforts in Arunachal Pradesh might proceed, leading to the current talks in New Delhi.

The news is music to the ears of Gary Zaetz, the nephew of 1st Lt. Irwin Zaetz, who was a crewmember on a B-24 bomber that went down in Arunachal Pradesh in 1944. Kuhles recently found the crash site of that plane, as detailed on his Web site, miarecoveries.org.

“Adm. Crisp’s visit really represents a major leap forward in our efforts, and we’re very grateful to JPAC and (the Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office) for accomplishing this,” Zaetz said.

Zaetz said JPAC officials told him recovery efforts could begin as soon as this month, but are more likely to commence in March 2009.

The Army Air Forces lost 460 aircraft and 792 men during the aerial resupply of China from India from 1942-45. Airlifters flew a treacherous route over the Himalayas, known as “the Hump,” resulting in numerous crashes in remote areas of India, Burma and China. Many of those lost aircrews are still listed as missing. Though Kuhles has identified some crash sites, JPAC can not investigate without clearance and protection from the host nation’s government.

Indian government officials “believe that it may now be safe to go into some of these places that may contain crash sites with missing service members from World War II,” DeSantis said. The talks will continue through Friday, he said.



Article: http://www.militarytimes.com/news/20...india_031908w/
  #2  
Old 03-23-2008, 03:09 AM
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Default Re: India to aid U.S. on WWII crash recovery

I, along with all the other relatives of the "Hot as Hell" crew - Capt. William Swanson, 1st Lt. Irwin Zaetz, 1st Lt. Robert Eugene Oxford, Flight Officer Sheldon Chambers, Staff Sgt. Charles Ginn, Staff Sgt. Harry Queen, Sgt. James Hinson, and Sgt. Alfred Gerrans, Jr. - am most grateful to the Indian and American Governments for the landmark agreement, announced March 19, permitting American recovery teams into India to recover the remains of American airmen lost during World War II. We all hope that these joint recovery operations will proceed with the utmost safety. We also recognize that this humanitarian achievement could not have been reached without the leadership of several key individuals, namely, Lisa Phillips of the organization World War II Families for Recovery of the Missing, US Pacific Command chief Admiral Timothy J. Keating, US Ambassador to India David Mulford, India's Ambassador to the United States Ronen Sen, the entire Vermont congressional delegation, Under Secretary of Defense Eric Edelman, Indian Defense Secretary Vijay Singh, Rear Admiral Donna L. Crisp, and the leaders of Arunachal Pradesh. It goes without saying that media coverage was a key element in this success: the Indian publication Frontier India Defence and Strategic News Service was the first publication to give publicity to the Hot as Hell, in the article "Hot as Hell, Found in Paradise", by S. Prasad. (http://frontierindia.net/hot-as-hell-found-in-paradise). We hope that this agreement signals a renewed focus on World War II MIA recovery efforts worldwide. We also look forward in the near future to official recognition of the efforts of Mr. Clayton Kuhles in locating these crash sites in South Asia.

Gary Zaetz,
Nephew of 1ST Lt. Irwin Zaetz, navigator of the "Hot as Hell", discovered December 7, 2006 in Arunachal Pradesh
 


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