Lost Over Laos
Scientists and soldiers combine forensics and archaeology to search for pilot Bat Masterson, one of 88,000 Americans missing in action from recent wars.
- By Robert M. Poole
- Photographs by Paul Hu and Christophe Paul
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 9)
Years passed. She put the tapes away. Masterson was promoted, in absentia, to lieutenant colonel. Hope flared when his name appeared, along with 20 others, on a list of prisoners captured in Laos and transferred to Vietnam. But the others on that list, from a 1972 report by the Defense Intelligence Agency, came home alive; Masterson, who had been included erroneously, remained at large. A decade after the 1968 crash, his status was routinely changed to missing in action, presumed dead. While many grass-roots activists believe that former enemies may still hold Americans captive, a lengthy investigation by Senators John Kerry, John McCain and others found no evidence of any POWs remaining in the region. Their 1993 report was unanimously approved by a Senate select committee.
Fran Masterson never remarried. She still dreamed about her husband, who was a boyish 31-year-old at the time of his disappearance. In those dreams he remained young, wandering the jungles just beyond reach. "Most of the time he doesn't know who I am," Fran Masterson told an interviewer in 2004. "Maybe it's the not knowing of what happened to him that makes it so hard." Frustrated by a lack of progress, she became a founding member of the National League of Families, an activist group that lobbies on behalf of missing service members, who are more numerous than one might imagine.
The United States counts more than 88,000 Americans as missing from its recent wars—some 78,000 from World War II; 8,100 from the Korean War; 1,805 from the Vietnam War; 126 from the cold war; one from the Gulf War of 1991; and one from the current Iraq war. About half are considered "unrecoverable," lost at sea or sequestered in sunken vessels.
But another 45,000 are thought to be recoverable, and in the years since Vietnam, military investigators, working with civilian scientists from the world's largest forensic anthropology laboratory at Hickam Air Force Base next to Honolulu, have made an arduous effort to whittle down the roster of the missing. Although focused initially on Southeast Asia, the recovery missions have circled the globe, from Tibet to Hungary to Russia and Papua New Guinea. More than 1,200 service members have been recovered and identified since 1973. Most of these—841 by the military's tally—were repatriated from battlefields in Southeast Asia; others came from North Korea, China and the scattered theaters of World War II.
A number of factors have contributed to the recent surge in recovery and identification operations. Prodding from people like Fran Masterson and other family members has created a strong political constituency for POW and MIA work, boosting the federal budget and personnel for the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC), the military unit charged with finding missing warriors. At the same time, advances in forensic science and DNA testing make it easier to identify a long-dead soldier or sailor on the basis of very little physical data—a bone fragment, a few teeth, a lock of hair—even in cases which have languished unsolved for decades. And, since the mid-1980s, improved relations with Vietnam and other Asian nations has meant better access for teams scouring the jungles for evidence. All of this has led to the growth, in sophistication as well as size, of the JPAC command, which employs more than 400 people and combines expertise in criminal investigation, archaeology, linguistics, bomb disposal, DNA processing and a number of other specialties for a single purpose—to account for all Americans who ever disappeared in battle.
"Nobody goes to the effort we Americans do," says Army Brig. Gen. Michael C. Flowers, commander of JPAC, headquartered at Hickam Air Force Base. "From the time we go to boot camp we learn to take care of one another. And we make the promise that no one gets left behind. We will go back again and again to look for those who might still be alive or those who have fallen."
It took some persistence to find Bat Masterson's crash site. By the autumn of 2005, when I arrived in rural Xieng Khuang Province of Laos with an anthropologist and a recovery team of nine service members from JPAC, the United States had already spent years in delicate negotiations for access to the region. Since the war, there has been periodic unrest among the indigenous Hmong hill tribes, old allies of the French and, later, of the Americans who fought there. Central authorities in Laos, a Communist regime since 1975, were understandably touchy about opening the region. Thus it was 1993 before the first investigators were admitted to northern Laos to search for Masterson, with follow-up missions in August 2004, October 2004 and July 2005.
Each foray into the mountains yielded a few scraps of new evidence—a 1967 quarter from the site, which fit the time frame of Masterson's disappearance; two 20-millimeter cannons consistent with the A-1 Skyraider's armament; parts from the plane's parachute assembly; many fragments of the blue glass used exclusively in the Skyraider's canopy; and a few shards of bone thought to be human. The bone was in such small pieces and so badly burned, however, that it contained little organic material, which made it an unlikely source of DNA to link Masterson and the wreck.
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Comments (3)
Someday I hope to join in the Air Force after High School and hopefully fly jets. Maybe if this happens to me I hope that they will find my bones and bring them home for my whole family to see the remains of me just one last time.
Posted by Patrick F. Games II on September 19,2012 | 11:06 PM
I and my family would like to say Thank you very much to the American Hero and your family whom were try to fight and protect the freedom of Lao people. I have very deep feeling and respectful of remembering Lt.Col Bat and the Family of Masterson forever. May the Lord bless your spirit and your family. If you want to contact me . Let click on the LAO MISSION INTERNATIONAL WEBSITE: www.laomission.org
Kevin Kong Smith
Posted by kevin Kong Smith on January 2,2011 | 09:40 AM
I had the pleasure to know Lt. Col "Bat"Masterson. I was stationed at Eglin A.F.B. 1963-1967. He was one of the finest officers I ever came in contact with. He was a natural born leader, with the ability to bring out the best in a person. To make you believe in yourself and that you could do anything that you wanted to if you would just give it a try. I always saw him as an upbeat andpositive individual. He was always friendly to everyone that he met. I never met anyone that had nothing but good positive things about him.
This country had a great officer in "Bat" Mastertson. I found out about his M.I.A. status in 1986 and felt that I had lost a friend. He has crossed the minds of myself and many of the people that had the pleasure to know him at Eglin many times over the years.
Respectfuly
Ted R. Powell
U.S.A.F. 1963-67
Posted by Ted Powell on April 18,2010 | 07:58 PM
Dont none of these articles realy intrest me. But i cant really relate to the storey, because it didnt stand out. I really respect the men and women who are in vietnam. Because of the simple fact that I wouldnt go out there and fight for my country. So I espect them to the fullest. But thats really all i have to say about the article.
Posted by Grant Johnson on April 6,2008 | 12:51 AM