ABOUT THIS BLOG

In Field Notes, NBC News will shed light on the stories that don't always make the headlines as well as offering analysis on the big and small stories of the day.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the country and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind this blog.



‘We’ll always have questions’

Posted: Monday, April 07, 2008 8:34 AM
Filed Under:

 WASHINGTON – We'll probably never know what really happened to Air Force Maj. Perry Jefferson and Army 1st Lt. Arthur Ecklund

On April 3, 1969, Jefferson, 37, of Denver, Colo., and Ecklund, 24, of Galesburg, Ill., took off in a single-engine O-1G Bird Dog aircraft for a reconnaissance flight over the mountains of South Vietnam. They were never seen again.

An extensive air search turned up no evidence of a crash and no sign of the men, except for a faint emergency beeper signal for several seconds. Jefferson and Ecklund were listed as missing in action despite reports of two men fitting their descriptions being held captive by the Communist Vietcong.

For 15 years, their disappearance remained a mystery. Then, in 1984, a former member of the South Vietnamese Air Force turned over to a U.S. official in the Philippines a human jaw bone he said belonged to one of two pilots whose aircraft was shot down. The jaw bone turned out to be Ecklund's. 

And in 2001, a Vietnamese national living in California handed over to U.S. officials human remains he said were recovered at a site where two American pilots crashed. Those were Jefferson's.

What the two Vietnamese were doing with the remains in the first place was never explained.

Larry Greer, a spokesman for the Pentagon's POW/MIA office, said he didn't know why the two Vietnamese had the remains, but he said no action was taken against them. 

"If we did so," Greer said, "that would be the last time we'd have access to anyone's remains. It's not punishment we're after; it's information we're after which leads us to the identification of missing Americans."

After DNA tests proved last year the remains were indeed Jefferson’s, the Pentagon returned his remains to his family for burial.

All of this was enough to convince Jefferson's younger brother that he was killed in a crash, not as a prisoner.

"The best part of the whole thing was to know he actually died in the crash," Michael Jefferson told The Denver News Channel.

Ecklund's elderly parents weren't so sure.

"To some extent, we'll always have questions," Ralph Ecklund, 87, told the Peoria Journal-Star in 2004. "But we've worried and stewed for some time, and if this is all they're going to find, then at least we'll have some closure."

That closure was completed last week with the burial of Jefferson's and Ecklund's remains at Arlington National Cemetery.

May they finally rest in peace.

John Rutherford is an NBC News Producer based out of the Washington, D.C. bureau and is a decorated Vietnam veteran. He also posts stories on the military at www.dailynightly.msnbc.com (click on "John Rutherford" under "categories").

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

WELCOME HOME my fallen brothers! Rest In Peace. May we always remember "All Gave Some and Some Gave All"  
FALLEN HEROS, we salute you, and appreciate the price you paid for us. Go with GOD my friends.
My condolences go to the two famlies of the soldiers involved. May God's love be with you and your family at a time like this. I understand and sympathize with what you are going through at the present time. I also know of the peace and closure that come along with our heroes returning home. In 1985, my Uncle, Frank E. Cannon's remains were located in Vietnam and returned home. He died in a prison camp in Sept. 1968.
QUOTE:War makes criminals of us all and should be a last resort instead of an option. It is a great crime against humanity along with genocide and other situation where a power over life and death is sought after, ie, abortion, and other invasion over where living human beings are fodder for power seeking men and women. END QUOTE".
I feared reading these responses as I somehow knew there would be a person like you to spout off their personal agenda. Criminals??? George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, Margee DeLafayette, Generals, Eisenhower,Patten, Bradley Criminals? I served with the Seawolves in Vietnam as a door gunner 1968-1971 and I too have placed my blood on the Alter of Freedom that you trample on to spew out your hatered. Please, do all patriots a favor... just leave, renounce your citizenship that was won according to you by criminals. Go to China, Afganastan, Iran, North Korea, any damn place but here. It was sickening enough to listen to the likes of you when I came home in a wheelchair, and now 37 years later you and those like you are still spewing their hate, all the while wrapped in the flag of freedom won by your account, criminals. How sick, and how sad a human being you are. I spit in your face as I do Jane Fondas, everyday of my life....
I think this guy Tom Collins had too many drinks named after him, or was it the other way around...get lost Tom you ungrateful creep!!  The true cost of Freedom was just buried in Arlington Cemetary.  RIP Brothers, you are home.
It is always a wonderful thing when we get to lay to rest our fallen heros.

But, there are still living POW's in southeast asia. Please keep the MIA/POW issue alive. There is indications that Scott Spiker (Gulf War) may also still be alive. There are still 3 soldies from the present conflict that are not accounted for.

Let's bring them home.
I don't think Hanoi Jane and Defectors would get through the gates with their bags
I don't think Hanoi Jane and Defectors would get through the gates with their bags
Thank You!! Maj. Jefferson and Lt. Ecklund and your families for your Ultimate Sacrifice for us. May God be with you always!!
As the Aero Medical Evac Association prepares for its reunion in Colorado Springs in June we take a moment to honor the empty table and place setting for those comrades who have passed on or who did not make it back from the wars.  It is hard watching these elderly men and women remember the flights and the patients they tended on their return from the hell of war.  Their eyes still mist and there is a haunted look that never quite goes away as they bear their memories or quietly sit with their comrades.  War is hell on those who survive and on those who remember.
I grew up through the Viet Nam war and have several friends from when I was in college who served. I find this situation completly out of line. We have heard claims that remains were buried in Vietnamise graves for their protcetion, that remains and POW's have been held so that the Viet gov. could make sure that the reperations were paid.I do not care for any of these reasons. I am even more digusted by the suggestion from Bill Braniff that we pay for remains and offer asslyum. For peace of mind I will accept that those two came by the remains by exhuming the crash site. If our gov. would use it's head we could offer something along the lines of "if you know where remains are contact the US gov". and we will issue the same offer. Not to tote the remains around for years and offer them up when they need money or do not want to go home.Always live up to your word but it's time to make a change. Taking remains as trophies on either side is deplorible. As to the remians of enemy dead after battle it is what it is. In all realality "unknown" is probibly the more common name on a soilder's headstone.I am glad that the families can now know where their sons are and that they have been given their full honors here at home. As the years pass and it becomes clear that our MIA's from that war are gone Let us honor them as they and the living Vet's deserve.Their service to us was as great as any other in the past or present.  
IM A YOUNG VET SERVED MY COUNTRY IN THE MARINES ,IN 68 I WAS ONE YEAR OLD  I HAVE THE UP MOST RESPECT FOR  MY BIG BROTHERS WHO DID TIME IN NAM .YOU DID US PROUD THEN YOU DO US PROUD NOW ,WELCOME HOME GUYS .
I pray for all service men and women and the family's
that wait for them.
What I find to be so sad and almost insulting is that
it took this long for DNA to come through with a poss ID
its not like we are back in the 40s.
Our GOV. should be more careful in bringing closure
to OUR soldiers and families , over twenty years
of having the remains and they are just now putting things straight.....???? My heart and prayers are with
Mothers,Fathers,Husbands and wifes of any soldier then and now.

thank you my brothers,for all you gave. may god give you peace. welcome home!  
thank you my brothers,for all you gave. may god give you peace. welcome home!  
thank you my brothers,for all you gave. may god give you peace. welcome home!  
Welcome home soldiers - May you rest in peace.

We are grateful to you and your families.
I am glad to see they came home , welcome home guys.
God Bless , eternal rest grant unto them.....
Hoo-Ra!! Welcome back home my fellow veterans,to the land of round door knobs...Over due -but never forgotten MIA's & POW's.. 1 st Cav Div. Hue,Phu Bai 67-68 Tet Offense ...RIP....
May God be with each and every family that has lost a son or daughter. I can truely say, I know you're pain. With time,the pain ease's . Our loved one's may be gone but they will never, ever be forgotton!
RIP brothers.  Belated welcome home; now you can finally rest in peace at home, where you belong.

Semper Fi!!!!


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):