Michael "Scott" Speicher Remains Found In Iraq After 18 Years

PAULINE JELINEK and PAMELA HESS   08/ 3/09 12:11 AM ET   AP

Pilot Found

WASHINGTON — Navy pilot Michael "Scott" Speicher was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the Gulf War in 1991, and it was there he apparently was buried by Bedouins, the sand hiding him from the world's mightiest military.

For nearly two decades, the family Speicher left behind, from outside Jacksonville, Fla., pushed the Defense Department to find out what had happened to him. On Sunday, the Pentagon disclosed that Marines had recovered Speicher's bones and skeletal fragments – enough for a positive identification.

Shot down over west-central Iraq on a combat mission in his FA-18 Hornet on Jan. 17, 1991, Speicher was declared killed by the Pentagon hours later. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney went on television and announced the U.S. had suffered its first casualty of the war.

But 10 years later, the Navy changed his status to missing in action, citing an absence of evidence that Speicher had died. In October 2002, the Navy switched his status to "missing/captured," although it has never said what evidence it had that he ever was in captivity. More reviews followed, without definitive answers.

His story never waned in Jacksonville. A large banner flying outside a firefighters' credit union has a photo of him with the words "Free Scott Speicher." At his church, a memorial was put up in his honor. The tennis complex at his alma mater, Florida State University, was named for him.

A high school classmate who helped form the group "Friends Working to Free Scott Speicher" said Sunday his biggest fear was that Speicher had been taken alive and tortured.

"This whole thing has been so surreal for all of the people who have known Scott," said Nels Jensen, 52, who now lives in Arkansas.

Jensen said the group was frustrated the military didn't initially send a search and rescue team after the crash, and then grew more perplexed as reports of his possible capture emerged. "Never again will our military likely not send out a search and rescue party for a downed serviceman," Jensen said.

In a statement issued Sunday, Speicher's family said, "We find some solace in having transformed the search process, so that no serviceman or woman is ever, ever, left behind again."

President Barack Obama thanked the Marines who recovered Speicher's remains. "As with all our service men and women considered Missing in Action, we remain steadfast in our determination to bring our American heroes home," he said.

Former President George H.W. Bush, who was commander in chief in 1991, said, "We already knew he was a hero, one who helped lead our way to a historic victory in the Gulf, but now his family and countrymen know – and history will finally record – that he was one of the very first patriots to give his life in the liberation of Kuwait."

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., planned to take down the POW/MIA flag he had placed outside his office when Speicher went missing. "These children can move on with their lives and know what a hero their father was and he died in the service of his country," Nelson told reporters.

The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 finally gave investigators the chance to search inside Iraq. Speicher's family – including two college-age children who were toddlers when he disappeared – believed more evidence would surface as Iraq grew more stable.

A number of new leads did surface after the invasion, including the discovery of what some believed were the initials "MSS" scratched into the wall of an Iraqi prison. More than 50 sites were checked by military search crews in the months after the invasion – hospitals, prisons, security archives, homes and the original site where Speicher's plane crashed, about 100 miles north of the Saudi Arabian border.

Crews first visited the site in 1995. They found wings, the canopy and unexploded ordnance, but the cockpit and Speicher were missing.

Investigators excavated a potential grave site in Baghdad in 2005, tracked down Iraqis said to have information about Speicher and made numerous other inquiries.

Officials said Sunday that they got new information last month from an Iraqi citizen, prompting Marines stationed in the western province of Anbar to visit a location in the desert that was believed to be the crash site. The Iraqi said he knew of two other Iraqis who recalled an American jet crashing and the remains of the pilot being buried in the desert, the Pentagon said.

"One of these Iraqi citizens stated that they were present when Capt. Speicher was found dead at the crash site by Bedouins and his remains buried," the Defense Department said in a statement.

The military recovered bones and multiple skeletal fragments and Speicher was positively identified by matching a jawbone and dental records, said Rear Adm. Frank Thorp. He said the Iraqis told investigators that the Bedouins had buried Speicher. It was unclear whether the military had information on how soon Speicher died after the crash.

Some had said they believed Speicher ejected from the plane and was captured by Iraqi forces, and the initials were seen as a potential clue he might have survived. There also were reports of sightings.

While dental records have confirmed the remains to be those of Speicher, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Rockville, Md., is running DNA tests on the remains recovered and comparing them with DNA reference samples previously provided by family members.

Last year, then-Navy Secretary Donald Winter ordered another review of the case after receiving a report from the Defense Intelligence Agency, which tracks prisoners of war and service members missing in action.

Many in the military believed for years that Speicher had not survived the crash or for long after. Intelligence had never found evidence he was alive, and some officials felt last year that all leads had been exhausted and Speicher would finally be declared killed.

But after the latest review, Winter said Speicher would remain classified as missing, despite Winter's strong reservations about the pilot's status and cited "compelling" evidence that he was dead.

Announcing his decision, Winter criticized the board's recommendation to leave Speicher's status unchanged, saying the board based its conclusions on the belief that Speicher was alive after ejecting from his plane. The board "chose to ignore" the lack of any parachute sighting, emergency beacon signal or radio communication, Winter said.

___

Associated Press writers Kim Gamel in Baghdad, Ron Word in Jacksonville, Fla., and Jacob Jordan in Atlanta contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Defense Department: http://www.defenselink.mil

Navy: http://www.navy.mil

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology: http://www.afip.org/index.html

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WASHINGTON — Navy pilot Michael "Scott" Speicher was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the Gulf War in 1991, and it was there he apparently was buried by Bedouins, the sand hi...
WASHINGTON — Navy pilot Michael "Scott" Speicher was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the Gulf War in 1991, and it was there he apparently was buried by Bedouins, the sand hi...
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goodog
Honk if you believe in a public editor.
11:18 PM on 08/02/2009
It obviously took Obama to find him, while the Bush administration simply used him to foment anger toward Iraq.
12:25 PM on 08/03/2009
To use this story for political purposes is just plain sad. You should be ashamed.
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goodog
Honk if you believe in a public editor.
01:28 PM on 08/03/2009
The shame is in the Bush administration's exploitation of this man and his family. The story describes all of it, and to act as if I brough it up is spurious.

The Bush administration lied, using the Tillman death for political gain also. And their misinformation campaign about Jessica Lynch.

"They used me to symbolize all this stuff. It's wrong." She reported being treated very well in Iraq, and that one person in the hospital even sang to her to help her feel at home."

Lynch gave congressional testimony that the Pentagon had erroneously portrayed her as a "Rambo from West Virginia," when in fact, she never fired a shot after her truck was ambushed.

Earlier in the day, Pat Tillman's brother, Kevin, also testified. Lynch also met with the Tillman family and compared her incident in Iraq to Pat Tillman's in Afghanistan saying that "Our stories are similar."

To want to suppress their stories is very unAmerican.
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08:09 PM on 08/04/2009
Yes, we are all ashamed of the Bush Administration.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SueMVetforObama
10:16 PM on 08/02/2009
May God rest his soul.
09:32 PM on 08/02/2009
While this is a terribly sad story, at least the family can now be provided with closure. My condolences to them.
09:09 PM on 08/02/2009
Peace and comfort to his family.
08:50 PM on 08/02/2009
I hope he is at peace.I hope his family is well.
06:59 PM on 08/02/2009
Bring home all our heroes.

The sooner it's done, the fewer will come back in boxes.
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GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
06:40 PM on 08/02/2009
Anyone remember one D. Cheney announcing his dea th without ever sending search and rescue? This whole thing would've been done with in 1991 had they done so.

It's frustrating to know that our military elected to leave this man behind. Dead or alive, he deserved better.
09:12 PM on 08/02/2009
do you know that for certain? What is the source? I hadnt heard this before--so I'd like to see your references that CHENEY--not the local command (i.e., Schwartzkopf) opted to ignore this pilot.
We needc some documentation, especially since we generally do our best to retrieve ALL of our dead/wounded. It is, however, my understanding, that it wasnt until AFTER the Gulf War that we KNEW where his aircraft ended up...

Anyhow..if you can provide us a citation or a link that SOD Cheney nixed any SAR I'd like to be able to check it out (at the time i was in a Florida Blood Center facility donating blood...and worrying about my Kuwaiti friends & acquaintences...since 1992--and especially since 2003-- I've worried about my IRAQI friends & acquaintences!).
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wilsonveteran
Free America End Big Government
11:14 PM on 08/02/2009
Good post Marbiol. Notice how they shut up when you ask for proof. 21 years in the military light Infantry, and I am proud to say we never left anyone behind. However one thing liberals don't understand is how confusing war becomes and how hard people try to find everyone even putting themselves at risk. For us it was the medivac helicopters.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:13 AM on 08/03/2009
SAR efforts would most likely have come under the command of General Horner, who was in charge of the air campaign.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:26 AM on 08/03/2009
The main reason they would have tried to rescue me if I were shot down is that a trained pilot is a valuable asset.

It took roughly $6 million (in 1991 dollars) and close to 2 years to take a person off the street, put them through pilot training and get them mission-ready in a bomber or fighter.

Since at least World War 2 the equation has been that you can build a new aircraft faster than than you can train a replacement pilot. Therefore it makes sense to try to rescue downed pilots.
06:27 PM on 08/02/2009
Welcome home.
Thank you.
R.I.P.
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06:25 PM on 08/02/2009
Well, at least he was never captured and tortured by Saddam as some had feared. There was a story in 2003 that Udey fed him to lions.

Rest in Peace.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:28 PM on 08/02/2009
I know a pilot who was a POW in Iraq.

The Iraqis were pretty rough but they weren't that creative. Mostly they "just" beat the crap out of him.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sviolette
Cops Pepper Spraying the Constitution!!!
09:19 PM on 08/02/2009
You say that as if we wouldn't have tortured him if the tables were turned.

If you are so against torture why don't you speak out against us torturing Iraqi's and other muslims?
06:17 PM on 08/02/2009
Every evening when the sun goes down, we will remember your name Captain Speicher
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LucreziaBorgia
05:37 PM on 08/02/2009
Captain you are home. Thank you for your service and devotion and may your family find the strength in this difficult time.
05:06 PM on 08/02/2009
RIP Capt. Speicher. Our prayers go out to you and your family. And who have suffered loss from these senseless wars.

Thank you to the Bedouin community who gave him respect and buried him.
04:58 PM on 08/02/2009
Welcome home Commander. Thank you for your service and devotion to our Country. Rest in Peace.
04:57 PM on 08/02/2009
I remember this story. It has always given me such a heavy heart.

As I recall....after the Iraqi war started.....some of our guys found a cell in a jail that had Captain Speicher's initials and other things carved into a wall....which led the Military to believe that he was captured alive.

My heart goes out to this family....and all the Military families that have had a loved one killed or injured.

My Son was deployed to Iraq twice.....I know how it feels to hear that Troops have died....and then wait to see if there is a knock at your door.

Captain Speicher and all of our Troops are the REAL Heroes. American Heroes.

I am happy that the Speicher family can have some type of closure......and give him the type of burial that only a Hero deserves.

Thanks to our Military past and present.
04:17 PM on 08/02/2009
why every time someone points out the fact behind the story everyone wants to wrap them self with the flag and forget about it

yes rip