Vietnam War Working Group
The Vietnam War Working Group (VWWG) was established in 1993. The U.S. Chairman
is Senator Bob Smith (R-NH), former Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee
on POW/MIA Affairs (1991-1993) and currently a senior member of the Senate
Armed Services Committee. The Russian Chairman is General-Major Nikolay Maksimovich
Bezborodov, an active duty Russian Air Force officer and three-term member
of the Duma. Senator Smith has been a member of the Commission since its inception
in 1992 and has co-chaired the working group since January 1997; General Bezborodov
assumed his position as a member of the Commission and VWWG co-chairman in
February 2000.
The American side of the Vietnam War Working Group seeks further information
from Russian archives and Russian veterans of the Vietnam War about America's
missing service members from that conflict. It is pursuing leads and information
in a variety of areas.
Access to the Podolsk Archives
The Central Archives of the Russian Ministry of Defense in Podolsk may contain
information of value to the American accounting effort, including reports
of the shoot down of American aircraft; POW interrogation reports; and the
activities of the Soviet "special group" that acquired several thousand
pieces of captured American combat equipment for eventual technical exploitation
in the former USSR. Senator Smith has asked General-Major Bezborodov to facilitate
U.S. access to Vietnam War era documents in the archive. Should this request
be denied, the U.S. side has urged the Russian side to broaden its own search
for such information.
The Russian side recently provided a list of 142 incident reports extracted
from the Podolsk archives. The VWWG has completed a preliminary analysis and
will ask the Russian side for more detailed information about the shoot-down
reports. The U.S. side will request access to original reports correlating
to cases of missing Americans.
Volkogonov Memoirs
In early February 1998, researchers on the staff of the U.S.-Russia Joint
Commission on POW/MIAs (USRJC) working in the personal papers of the late
General-Colonel Dmitri A. Volkogonov found a six-page, Russian language, autobiographical
sketch entitled, "A Little More About Myself." This brief memoir,
written by Volkogonov in August 1994, reveals his discovery in Russian archives
of a document from the late 1960s that assigned to the KGB the task of "delivering
knowledgeable Americans to the USSR for intelligence purposes."
Nowhere in Volkogonov's memoir is the purported KGB plan linked explicitly
to American prisoners of war. Joint Commission analysts have concluded, however,
that Volkogonov's discussion of the KGB plan in the context of his work with
the Joint Commission on POW/MIAs strongly suggests that Volkogonov thought
the plan targeted American POWs. Moreover, the date of the plan (late 1960s)
suggests that American POWs from Southeast Asia may have been the targets
of the KGB plan.
With the active support of Senator Smith, the VWWG immediately launched an
inquiry into Volkogonov's memoir. The purpose of the inquiry was to gather
as much information as possible about Volkogonov's revelation before requesting
an official explanation from the Russian Government.
The response from the Russians to date has not been encouraging. In the government
and on the Joint Commission, Russian officials have said that their archives
contain no evidence that a KGB plan as described by Volkogonov ever existed.
They claim that Volkogonov "later rechecked his information and arrived
at the conclusion that such a plan did not exist as a separate entity,"
but they offer no evidence to support this claim.
Meanwhile, the issue of Volkogonov's memoir became public knowledge with the
first revelation in the U.S. press on November 9, 1998. U.S. and Russian media
outlets have covered this issue, and members of Congress, American POW/MIA
family groups, POW activists, and veteran organizations have expressed an
interest.
The American side of the VWWG is determined to pursue a complete explanation
from the Russian Government on the Volkogonov issue.
Soviet advisors in Vietnam
During the Vietnam War, the Soviet Union provided technical and material assistance
to North Vietnam. Air defense systems and personnel were sent, both to equip
and train the North Vietnamese.
About two years ago, the U.S. side began to gather evidence that Soviet officials
interrogated American POWs in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. This
project examined information from three primary sources: the testimony of
former American POWs; the testimony of Russian veterans of the Vietnam War
who had knowledge of direct Soviet participation in POW interrogation; and
U.S. Intelligence Community reports that suggest the Soviets sought or obtained
direct access to American POWs for interrogation. If, in fact, Soviet officials
participated in interrogation of American POWs, or received interrogation
reports from Vietnam, it would be reasonable to assume that these reports
were generated in Vietnam and forwarded to Moscow for processing. Such interrogation
reports should be available today in Russian archives (probably GRU and KGB
archives), and these reports might contribute to clarifying the fates of unaccounted-for
Americans.
During the war, a Soviet trophy group, or "spetsgruppa," composed
of GRU officers, was deployed to Vietnam to acquire captured American combat
equipment and arrange for shipment to the Soviet Union for exploitation. Although
the U.S. has no interest in the classified aspects of the program, members
and technicians who were assigned to these groups may be able to provide new
details about shoot down incidents in Vietnam. For instance, in 1992, representatives
of Task Force Russia (the predecessor of JCSD) discovered an F-111 crew capsule
at the Moscow Aviation Institute. With assistance from FBI experts, Task Force
Russia analysts correlated the capsule to a specific shoot down incident.
The U.S. side has raised this issue several times continues to press for more
information on the "spetsgruppa" and its members. In addition, the
Russian side has agreed to try to locate museums and technical institutes
where U.S. equipment might be displayed or stored, and, where possible, arrange
meetings with technicians who might know how the equipment was acquired and
how it was transported to the USSR.
Interview Program
The Vietnam War Working Group maintains a vigorous program to locate and interview
former Soviet military personnel who served in Vietnam or who have knowledge
of events during that period. Since 1992, the VWWG has conducted over a thousand
interviews in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and other former Soviet republics.
The majority of interviews have been with PVO (Air Defense Forces) veterans
who served as military advisors in North Vietnam during the war. VWWG personnel
have also interviewed aviators, journalists, KGB and GRU officers, and former
Soviet (now Russian) Government and Communist Party officials.
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