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Yesterday we brought you part one of our story on retired
Brigadier General James Wold, a much-decorated Air Force pilot in Vietnam
who later set up a law practice near Cooperstown.
Back in 1969 and 70, many of Wolds 241 combat missions were
search and rescues in Vietnam and Laos. In 1994, President Bill Clinton
appointed Wold Deputy Assistant Secretary of State. The republican lawyer
was to be the administrations point person for stepping up the pace
to discover the fate of thousands of U.S. POWs and MIAs in all previous
wars.
Wold explained what led to the formation of the joint U.S./Russian commission:
During the war in Southeast Asia, he wrote, the war
in Laos which was every bit as intense as in Vietnam, and in some
ways more-so for political reasons was conducted as a secret war.
Everybody knew something was going on, but it wasnt talked about
officially. I knew that if I were shot down over Laos, JoAnne would be
told that I was missing, but the would also be told not to talk publicly
about it, and especially dont talk to the press. That was symptomatic
of the Cold War mentality of secrecy...which existed for decades after
WWII. But that legacy plagued us in the governments relations with
the families of those missing as a result of the war in Southeast Asia.
It took the organized wives of...POWs and (MIAs) to form the League
of Families and to bring pressure to bear on the Congress (and) Administration,
he said, to begin to reveal to the public, and the families in particular,
just what it was doing to account for its missing soldiers, sailors, airmen
and marines...the government had badly mishandled the way it dealt with
the families.
For the next three years, Wold carried on intense negotiations with Russia
and a number of Southeast Asian nations. Eventually, he established diplomatic
relations with the Vietnamese government and had a diplomatic break-through
with the North Koreans; it was the first time in 40 years that delegates
of the U.S. and North Korea had met. Wold said the North Koreans were
extremely suspicious, but that they grew to believe the U.S. would abide
by their agreements.
Over a period of eighteen months, he wrote, we concluded
agreements for U.S. teams of experts (to work) inside North Korea, researching,
investigating, and excavating crash sites and burial grounds in search
of (more than) 8,100 Americans still missing from the Korean War.
Wold also had to face the many openly hostile families who wanted to know
whether their missing loved ones were still alive, and whether they were
still imprisoned by current or former enemy nations. Wold proved to be
very gifted in this department.
In 2003, Jims wife, JoAnne, said, He had great empathy. People
could trust him. He started a program where he and his aides sat down
with families of missing servicemen embittered by U.S. government secrecy
after Vietnam. They went through the files of each man with their families
and told them what happened to their loved ones. That program is still
being used today.
Jim said he was merely a man of faith and religious conviction born
of a lifes experiences, including...a life-threatening tractor rollover
accident, and a fighter pilots long hours of boredom interspersed
with moments of stark terror. This part of my life is very personal
to me; I am not a crusader. Its just a central part of what I am,
tempered by a clear realization of my frailties.
For his successful efforts on behalf of missing members of the U.S. military,
the Clinton Administration presented Wold with the Secretary of Defense
Award for Outstanding Public Service.
Sources: JoAnne and James Wold, private papers; Terry Devine, Fargo Forum,
2/19/03
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