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By on August 2nd, 2009 at 10:14 am

Remains of Michael “Scott” Speicher Found In Iraq

» by in: Iraq

Here is some good, but at the same time sad news for the family of Navy pilot Scott Speicher:

CORRECTION Gulf War Missing Pilot

The remains of the first American lost in the Gulf War have been found in Iraq, the military said Sunday, a sorrowful resolution of a nearly two-decade old question about the fate of Navy Capt. Michael “Scott” Speicher.

The Pentagon said the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology on Saturday positively identified the remains, buried in the desert and located after officials received new information from an Iraqi citizen about a crash.

Speicher’s disappearance has bedeviled investigators since his fighter was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the 1991 war.

The top Navy officer said the discovery is evidence of the military’s commitment to bring its troops home. “Our Navy will never give up looking for a shipmate, regardless of how long or how difficult that search may be,” said Adm. Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval Operations.

The Pentagon initially declared Speicher killed. But uncertainty — and the lack of remains — led officials over the years to change his status a number of times to “missing in action” and later “missing-captured.” The family Speicher left behind, from outside Jacksonville, Fla., continued to press for the military to do more to resolve the case.

Family spokeswoman Cindy Laquidara said relatives learned on Saturday that Speicher’s remains had been found.

“The family’s proud of the way the Defense Department continued on with our request” to not abandon the search, she said. “We will be bringing him home.”

Laquidara said the family would have another statement after being briefed by the defense officials; she did not know when that would be.

More than a decade after he was shot down in a combat mission, the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 finally gave investigators the chance to search inside Iraq. That led to a number of new leads, including the discovery of what some believed were the initials “MSS” scratched into the wall of an Iraqi prison.

The search also led investigators to excavate a potential grave site in Baghdad in 2005, track down Iraqis said to have information about Speicher and make numerous other inquiries in what officials say was an exhaustive search.

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 which was believed to be the crash site of Speicher’s FA-18 Hornet.

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 Captain Speicher was found dead at the crash site by Bedouins and his remains buried,” the Defense Department said in a statement.  [Associated Press]

After the war in 2003 the Al Sahra Airfield outside of Tikrit was the area my unit secured and an initial brigade mission was to ask locals for information in regards to Captain Speicher who was believed to have crashed out in the desert west of Tikrit.  Nothing become of the inquiries, but all of us at the brigade TOC were well aware of Speicher’s story and hoped something would eventually turn up.  That is why the base was given the name initially Camp Speicher before being changed to FOB Speicher to keep the memory of Captain Speicher alive as new units rotated in and out of the base.  It is good to see closure has finally come on this 18 year old mystery.

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  • Teadrinker
    9:21 pm on August 2nd, 2009 1

    I was going to send you a link to this story but figured you probably knew about it. Little did I know that you actually had first-hand experience in searching for the guy.

  • The Western Confucia
    3:04 am on August 3rd, 2009 2

    May his family finally have some measure of peace.

    "For just one example of the disgusting exploitation of Capt. Scott Speicher by pro-war officials and pundits, I give you this from Jed Babbin on March 23, 2003, three days after the invasion of Iraq began:

    "'He [Speicher] may still be alive in Iraq, rumored to have been kept as a personal torture toy for Saddam’s older son.'

    "How must Speicher’s widow and two children have felt when hearing such rumors, which were cynically manufactured by the likes of Bush, Rumsfeld, and Babbin to sell their war?"

    So asked Matt Barganier — When Will They Apologize to the Speicher Family?

 

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