How US veterans are helping locate Vietnam's mass graves
Former enemies are uniting to bring healing and closure to both sides

Decades after the Vietnam War, US soldiers are returning to the country but on a very different mission – to help their former adversaries find the burial sites of their missing comrades.
Where veterans from US and Vietnam once "exchanged gunfire", now they "exchange handshakes and smiles", said Al Jazeera, but time is running out for more discoveries.
Firebase Bird
In 2022, Major Dang Ha Thuy, who fought for North Vietnam, greeted four American veterans at the airport and they travelled to the Kim Son Valley and the site of the 1966 battle at Firebase Bird.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
The notorious fighting erupted straight after a Christmas truce, when North Vietnamese forces launched a "ferocious assault", said Firstpost. The fighting claimed the lives of 27 Americans and 267 Vietnamese soldiers.
For Spencer Matteson, the memories of a battlefield "covered with dead bodies" are still painful. But with his help, Vietnamese excavation teams found the remains of approximately 60 soldiers, who were buried properly at the Tang Bạt Ho Town Martyrs’ Cemetery, in a "solemn ceremony" attended by state leaders and thousands of veterans.
Since then, teams have located the remains of around 600 people across eight mass graves, but they have also begun to face difficulties. Matteson and three other US veterans have returned to Vietnam but they "ran into the stumbling block that is the human memory", said Al Jazeera, because "half a century is plenty of time for memories to fade".
So time is "running out" as the number of living Vietnam War veterans "dwindles", said First Post. There's an "upper limit", said Bob March, a 77-year-old US veteran, and in 10 years time, it's "going to be very difficult to find many Vietnam veterans". The teams in the US and Vietnam are asking for more help from their respective governments.
Grief and relief
For the families of those whose remains have been discovered there has been "a great outpouring of grief and relief", said Al Jazeera. There can also be an opportunity for healing for US soldiers, said Matteson, particularly "the ones that are still suffering from PTSD".
But one of his colleagues has his own description for the emotions of the process. "I wouldn't call it closure", said Steve Hassett. "My daughter called it 'closing the circle.' That's a good description."
John Bryant, a former Australian soldier who has also returned to Vietnam to find the bodies of Vietnamese soldiers he helped kill and bury, told ABC News he was "happy" that he had "found them" and has been "able to give them back to Vietnam and their relatives".
Meanwhile, the work continues. When Bob Connor, who helped pioneer the search for mass graves of North Vietnamese soldiers, saw "the red, tearful eyes" of a woman who was reunited with her loved one after 49 years, he "knew his work was not finished", said the United States Institute of Peace.
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Chas Newkey-Burden has been part of The Week Digital team for more than a decade and a journalist for 25 years, starting out on the irreverent football weekly 90 Minutes, before moving to lifestyle magazines Loaded and Attitude. He was a columnist for The Big Issue and landed a world exclusive with David Beckham that became the weekly magazine’s bestselling issue. He now writes regularly for The Guardian, The Telegraph, The Independent, Metro, FourFourTwo and the i new site. He is also the author of a number of non-fiction books.
-
France's war on 'Algerian Nutella'
Under The Radar A wildly popular hazelnut spread is causing a storm across the channel
-
John Kenney's 6 favorite books that will break your heart softly
Feature The novelist recommends works by John le Carré, John Kennedy Toole, and more
-
Book reviews: 'Buckley: The Life and the Revolution That Changed America' and 'How to Be Well: Navigating Our Self-Care Epidemic, One Dubious Cure at a Time'
Feature How William F. Buckley Jr brought charm to conservatism and a deep dive into the wellness craze
-
US says Trump vetoed Israeli strike on Khamenei
Speed Read This comes as Israel and Iran pushed their conflict into its fourth day
-
After Israel's brazen Iran attack, what's next for the region and the world?
TODAY'S BIG QUESTION Following decades of saber-rattling, Israel's aerial assault on Iranian military targets has pushed the Middle East to the brink of all-out war
-
Why are military experts so interested in Ukraine's drone attack?
TODAY'S BIG QUESTION The Zelenskyy government's massive surprise assault on Russian airfields was a decisive tactical victory — could it also be the start of a new era in autonomous warfare?
-
North Korea's army of fake IT workers
The Explainer Using AI and stolen information to craft false identities, they are becoming an 'increasing menace' to top tech companies in the US and UK
-
China looms large over India and Pakistan's latest violence
IN THE SPOTLIGHT Beijing may not have had troops on the ground, but as South Asia's two nuclear powers bared their teeth over Kashmir, China eyed an opportunity
-
Can the world stop Israel from starving Gaza?
Today's Big Question Total blockade on food and aid enters its third month, and Israel is accused of 'weaponising starvation'
-
Ukraine-US minerals deal: is Trump turning away from Putin?
Today's Big Question US shows 'exasperation' with Russia and signs agreement with Ukraine in what could be a significant shift in the search for peace
-
Sudan's civil war two years on: is there any hope for peace?
Today's Big Question Very small chance of significant breakthrough at London talks today as the warring factions are not included