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Đây là document HR 3668 Congressional Record 104th Congress (1995-1996) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PUBLIC BILLS AND RESOLUTIONS (House of Representatives - June 18, 1996) By Mr. DORNAN: H.R. 3668. A bill to require the Secretary of Defense to provide back pay to the Vietnamese commandos who were employed by the United States during the Vietnam conflict to conduct covert operations in North Vietnam so as to compensate the commandos for the years in which they were imprisoned and persecuted in Vietnam; to the Committee on National Security.
KERRY (AND MCCAIN) AMENDMENT NO. 4451 (Senate - July 11, 1996)
[Page: S7784] GPO's PDF(Ordered to lie on the table.) Mr. KERRY (for himself and Mr. McCain) submitted an amendment intended to be proposed by them to the bill, S. 1894, supra; as follows: On page 88, between lines 7 and 8, insert the following: Sec. 8099. Of the total amount appropriated under title II, $20,000,000 shall be available subject to authorization, until expended, for payments to Vietnamese commandos captured and incarcerated by North Vietnam after having entered the Democratic Republic of Vietnam pursuant to operations under a Vietnam era operation plan known as `OPLAN 34A', or its predecessor, and to Vietnamese operatives captured and incarcerated by North Vietnamese forces while participating in operations in Laos or along the Lao-Vietnamese border pursuant to `OPLAN 35', who died in captivity or who remained in captivity after 1973, and who have not received payment from the United States for the period spent in captivity.
(Ms. SANCHEZ asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend her remarks.)
Ms. SANCHEZ. Mr. Speaker, 2 weeks ago the House Committee on National Security unanimously approved my amendment to honor and recognize the former South Vietnamese army commandos who were employees of the United States Government during the Vietnam War.
Today, the Members of this House had the opportunity to properly honor those brave men by supporting the Department of Defense authorization bill for fiscal year 1999.
Last year, the President signed into law legislation that I advocated to ensure that the United States Government honor a 30-year-old bad debt and pay these men who worked for the United States Government the wages they earned but were denied during the Vietnam War.
These individuals were trained by the Pentagon to infiltrate and destabilize communist North Vietnam.
Many of these commandos were captured and tortured while in prison for 15 to 20 years, and many never made it out.
Declassified DOD documents showed that U.S. officials wrote off the commandos as dead even though they knew from various sources that many were alive in Vietnamese prisons.
The documents also show that U.S. officials lied to the soldiers' wives, paid them tiny `Death Gratuities' and washed their hands of the matter.
For example, Mr. Ha Van Son was listed as dead by our Government in 1967, although he was known to be in a communist prison in North Vietnam. Today he is very much alive and well and living in Chamblee, GA. In my hand I hold the United States Government's official declaration of his death.
Because it was a secret covert operation, the U.S. Government thought they could easily ignore the commandos, their families, friends, and their previous contacts without anyone noticing.
As the Senior Senator from Pennsylvania said in a recent hearing, `This is a genuinely incredible story of callous, inhumane, and really barbaric treatment by the United States.'
In the 104th Congress, this House approved legislation that required the Department of Defense to pay reparations to the commandos.
This bill would have provided $20 million to the commandos and their survivors, an average grant of about $40,000 per commando. It called them to be paid $2,000 a year for every year they were in prison, less than the wages they were due.
President Clinton signed this legislation into law (Public Law 104-201).
However, in April of 1997, the Department of Defense said that the statute was legislatively flawed and the Secretary could not legally make payments.
I then contacted Secretary Cohen requesting the administration's help to correct this error.
The administration responded by supporting inclusion of the funding in the Supplemental Appropriations Bill for fiscal year 1997 (Public Law 105-18)
Last year, I met at a public forum with 40 commandos from my district.
One individual shared with me his story of how he parachuted into enemy territory, was captured, convicted of treason, beaten, thrown into solitary confinement for 11 months, then moved among hard--labor camps for the next seven years.
His story is not unlike countless others. I request unanimous consent to insert into the record one story of this abuse headlined `Uncommon Betrayal' as reported by an Atlantia newspaper recently.
Today, however, I am pleased to provide this Body with this update.
To date, the Commando Compensation Board has been established at the Pentagon; 266 claims have been processed; 142 Commandos have been paid.
All this was made possible because of the commitment of this House.
After years of torture by the North Vietnamese, the callousness of being declared dead by the United States Government, and years of anguish over not receiving their rightful compensation--these brave men now deserve recognition.
The South Vietnamese Lost Army Commandos are finally a step closer to having the United States Government honor their contracts for their years of service to the United States Army.
I am proud that the members of the House had an opportunity to properly honor these brave men
We can not bring those who perished back, but we can give these individuals the dignity and respect that's been so long overdue.
Who supports this resolution?
The State of California American Legion strongly endorses this amendment and I would like to submit the letter from the Department Commander Frank Larson into the Record.
In Commander Larson's letter dated May 1, 1998, he states, `Ms. Sanchez: I'm sure if history were unfolded for all to see it would show that the South Vietnamese commandos, who aided the United States Government in covert actions against the North Vietnamese, were responsible for saving many American lives.'
It goes on to say: `To that end, the same recognition due our soldiers, sailors, marines and airman involved in the Vietnamese Conflict should be afforded to the former South Vietnamese commandos, who so gallantly served and endured.'
It is also supported by: The Air Commando Organization; The Special Forces Organization.
American veterans who fought side by side with the Commandos, come to their defense in letters of support.
I would like to share with you what our soldiers have to say about the commandos.
This letter comes from a special forces NCO:
`Dear Sir: I had the opportunity to work with these men in which they not only risked their lives, but continually put themselves in harms way. * * * We are aware of terrible trials and conditions these men endured for so long and we would like to help * * *'
I would also like to take this opportunity to mention that last year, during POW/MIA recognition day, I had the opportunity to meet with several members of my veteran community.
I had the opportunity to speak with former POWs and family members whose loved ones were taken as prisoners or declared missing in action. Several of the veterans mentioned their support for the Commandos and urged that the Government honor its word.
Today, we gave these commandos what they really wanted, the distinction of honoring their service in the Vietnam War. And on behalf of the 40 commandos residing in the 46th Congressional District of California, I would like to thank the Members of this body for their commitment to honor and to recognize the former South Vietnamese army commandos.
Mr. Speaker, I submit for the Record a series of documents relating to these former South Vietnamese commandos.
The United States sent its officials to the doors of Vietnamese women to tell them their husbands were dead. They were not. The U.S. government paid the survivors a few hundred dollars as a "death gratuity," despite evidence the "dead" really were alive. When the facts came to light, federal agencies refused to live up to signed agreements promising to continue the salaries of the Vietnamese soldiers if they were captured on their mission for U.S. forces.
Last week the federal government belatedly acknowledged its shameful record in the affair of 300 former Vietnamese commandos and agreed to pay each of them $40,000. The payments are long overdue.
The Vietnamese were part of a CIA-sponsored secret army formed during the 1960s and sent from South Vietnam into North Vietnam in an inept attempt to destabilize the Communist regime in Hanoi. Many of the commandos were captured and tortured while imprisoned for 15 to 20 years. A good number of those who survived imprisonment and finally were freed made their way to Los Angeles and Orange counties.
The federal government kept information about the commando expeditions secret. Only this year did details emerge, in records pried loose by requests from the commandos' lawyers and The Times under the Freedom of Information Act.
The disclosures prompted a U.S. Senate hearing at which the Pentagon's lies and cover-up were laid bare. A lawsuit for compensation to the veterans will be dropped after the payments are made.
Thai Van Hoang, who spent 17 years in prison and now lives in Westminster, was gracious in discussing the promised payment. He said the issue was not the money but rather that for the first time the U.S. government "concedes that we exist." A White House spokesman said the payments recognize this country's "moral obligation" to heed its promises. The ex-commandos can't be made whole, but they deserve at least this recognition.
MEMORANDUM FOR CORRESPONDENTS | July 25, 1997 |
The Fiscal Year 1997 National Defense Authorization Act, Section 657 authorizes the Secretary of Defense to make payments to Vietnamese commandos who participated in covert intelligence missions behind enemy lines during the Vietnam War and were incarcerated by the North Vietnamese and held beyond 1973, when nearly all other POW's and internees were repatriated. On June 17, 1997, Congress appropriated $20 million for the payments to these Vietnamese Commandos. Accordingly, the Department of Defense will begin the process of accepting and adjudicating claims and making payments to the Vietnamese Commandos or their surviving spouse or children.
While these commandos were not members of the U.S. Armed Forces or the Republic of South Vietnam military, civilian officials or employees of either government, they were civilian contractors of the South Vietnamese Government who participated in covert operations directed first by the CIA and later by a U.S. Joint Military Organization, Military Assistance Command (Studies and Observation Group).
The department published detailed regulations in the Federal Register, "Compensation of Former Operatives Incarcerated by the Democratic Republic of Vietnam", on July 25, 1997. The public may comment on these regulations within 60 days from the date of publication. These regulations will include the address to which claimants must write to establish their claims, and, in general, describe the mechanisms by which the Department of Defense will conduct the process.
The department intends to expeditiously process claims and begin to make payments as soon as practical after all regulatory requirements for comments have been received and acted upon.
BACKGROUND:
The 1997 Defense Authorization Act authorized the Secretary of Defense to compensate Vietnamese operatives who participated in specific missions (described below) during the Vietnam War. The Assistant Secretary of Defense (Force Management Policy) appointed a Commission to adjudicate the individual claims of the commandos, and tasked the Army to provide a voting member for the Commission, establish a Commission Support Staff to process and pay claims determined valid by the Commission, and to provide a Staff Director. The Secretary of the Army tasked this mission to the Deputy Under Secretary of the Army (International Affairs)(DUSA-IA). The Support Staff is a Field Operating Agency of the Army Secretariat, and reports to the Military Deputy to the DUSA-IA. The DUSA-IA is the DoD Executive Agent for providing direct support to the Commission.
Vietnamese individuals recruited and contracted as intelligence agents by the South Vietnamese Government from 1960 to 1963, were trained, equipped and funded by the CIA to conduct covert intelligence operations inside North Vietnam. The concept of this operation, as Army MG (Ret.) John Singlaub testified, was
"to introduce these intelligence assets into North Vietnam to perform basically three missions. First, was to collect positive intelligence on the North Vietnamese in North Vietnam. The second was to conduct limited and very specific sabotage activities. And finally their mission would be to become a cadre for a resistance operation against the North Vietnamese communist regime."
Almost all of the agents were either killed or captured by the North Vietnamese. According to an article introduced during these hearings by Sedgwick Tourison, author of Secret Army, Secret War, "[b]etween 1960 and late in 1963, roughly 250 agents sent by the CIA and South Vietnam into North Vietnam were lost…."
Responsibility for the conduct of the operations transferred from the CIA to DoD in January, 1964, when the Military Assistance Command Vietnam Special Operations Group (later changed to "Studies and Observations Group")(MACVSOG) was formed. Despite signs that several of the teams were compromised/captured, DoD continued the operations under the newly formed MACVSOG. According to Mr. Tourison’s Congressional Record article, "[b]etween the spring of 1964 and October 1967, MACVSOG lost 240 more agents inside North Vietnam and scores of agents in adjacent Laos and Cambodia." None were released from North Vietnamese prison camps or reeducation centers in 1973 when known American prisoners were repatriated under the terms of the Paris Peace Accords.
Another component of MACVSOG, employed American-led teams to conduct cross-border operations, primarily into Laos and along the Lao-Vietnamese border. These operations were conducted from 1965 up until 1972. The 12-man teams normally consisted of 2 or 3 Americans and 9 Vietnamese, primarily from one of the Montagnard tribes or of other minority ethnic extraction. Although these operations were much more successful, perhaps as many as 20 - 30 Vietnamese were taken prisoner by the Communists during this period.