P.O.W.’s Felt Their Mission Was to Resist (Lurie, Webb, Clower, Hitshew, Alvarez, Rehmann, Thorsness)

The New York Times has reviewed the public comments of nearly 100 returned men and interviewed several dozen in depth. The “battle of Hanoi” as one prisoner called it, emerges as a complex and fascinating story of men under extreme stress.

The tales of torture seem genuine, but physical brutality played a rather small part in the lives of many inmates, particularly those shot down more recently. And it is still uncertain how the prisoners’ fierce commitment to resist a despised enemy has colored their accounts of prison life.

The story is complex in other ways. Men captured in the North were often incarcerated in old French prisons and sometimes spent years in the same cell. Prisoners taken in South Vietnam lived mainly in jungle camps and moved constantly with the tides of war.

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Commissioned in Hanoi (Read McLeary)

In 1967, there was a “unit” of approximately 300 Americans fighting the Vietnam War from within a Hanoi prison. The unit—later named the 4th Allied POW Wing—was located in the drab North Vietnamese capital. Within this unit, every man had the same job: prisoner of war. All—except three enlisted airmen—were

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‘I wasn’t supposed to get shot down’ (Leo Hyatt)

Capt. Leo Hyatt, USN (Ret.), held as a Vietnam prisoner of war for more than five-and-a-half years, was the keynote speaker at the Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay POW/MIA commemoration, held at the Subase Chapel. It was on Aug. 13, 1967, during a high-speed photo reconnaissance operation over a railroad

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