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Vietnam charged Pentagon $10,000 per document for missing soldier records, report says

TLDR:

  • Vietnam has charged the Pentagon $86 million since 2016 but resolved only 25 cases of missing American soldiers
  • Advocacy groups accuse Hanoi of charging up to $10,000 for single-page documents, turning the POW/MIA mission into a “revenue-generating enterprise”
  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited Hanoi Sunday, calling the search for missing Americans a “top priority” of the Trump administration
  • More than 1,500 U.S. troops remain missing from the Vietnam War that ended in 1975

Resolving cases of missing Americans from the Vietnam War remains a top priority of the Trump administration, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Sunday during a visit to Hanoi — even as critics accuse Vietnam of turning the humanitarian mission into a moneymaking operation.

The Pentagon has spent more than $86 million since 2016 on Vietnam’s cooperation in searching for missing soldiers, but only 25 cases have been resolved, according to a report by the National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia.

Vietnam has charged the Pentagon as much as $10,000 for a single-page document related to missing soldiers, the report said. The study accused Vietnam of overcharging “to extort money from the United States.”

Vietnam has transformed the POW/MIA accounting mission into a revenue-generating enterprise rather than a humanitarian obligation,” the report said.

More than 1,500 U.S. troops remain missing from the Vietnam War that ended in 1975. Many are classified as “non-recoverable.”

Mr. Hegseth praised the work of about a dozen service members at the Pentagon’s Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency office in Hanoi.

“As we say, leave no man behind, and we appreciate your partnership in that,” Mr. Hegseth told Vietnamese defense officials.

Read more:

Pete Hegseth in Hanoi: Pursuit of lost Americans from Vietnam War is top priority at Pentagon


This article is written with the assistance of generative artificial intelligence based solely on Washington Times original reporting and wire services. For more information, please read our AI policy or contact Ann Wog, Managing Editor for Digital, at awog@washingtontimes.com


The Washington Times AI Ethics Newsroom Committee can be reached at aispotlight@washingtontimes.com.

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