Since
1985, the U.S. government has been in possession of intelligence
reports regarding the detainment of American POWs in a secret
underground prison in Hanoi, Vietnam. No action, however, has been taken
to bring these men home. Just one example of these reports is the
following:
“DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) Source 8682: A nephew of Cambodian leader, Heng Samrin, fled his country to neighboring Thailand in late 1985, early 1986. He told U.S. officials soon after his arrival that while attending a study course in Hanoi in September 1984, he and 17 other Lao and Vietnamese officials attending the course were taken on a tour of a large underground prison in Hanoi and that while inside the prison he and the others observed approximately 300 American POWs being detained there. He explained that Vietnamese Premiere Pham Van Dong had permitted the visit because ‘he wanted to demonstrate the bravery of Vietnamese troops and [the] power of Communism by showing how the Vietnamese were able to humble the Americans.’
“The Cambodian explained that on the morning of Sept. 12, he and the other officials left the Hanoi Central Party Committee office and drove for about 15 minutes. He said the officials’ eyes were covered during the entire trip and remained covered until the group was inside the underground facility. He described the prison as being 100 by 100 meters in size and said he was told it contained a total of 38 cells. He said he and the others personally observed the Americans in three of these cells, approximately 100 to a cell. He said the Americans appeared to be in their late 30s and were ‘very slender and pale with long beards.’ Some were bald. All were dressed in blue civilian clothes and some used canes.”
John J. Tobak
MADISON
Sour grapes, Mr. Heard? Sounds like you’re still smarting about the last Roxbury Board of Education election results. In case you forget, you and your TEAM lost. The voters of Roxbury voted for the CARE candidates two-to-one. Is that hard to accept?
“DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) Source 8682: A nephew of Cambodian leader, Heng Samrin, fled his country to neighboring Thailand in late 1985, early 1986. He told U.S. officials soon after his arrival that while attending a study course in Hanoi in September 1984, he and 17 other Lao and Vietnamese officials attending the course were taken on a tour of a large underground prison in Hanoi and that while inside the prison he and the others observed approximately 300 American POWs being detained there. He explained that Vietnamese Premiere Pham Van Dong had permitted the visit because ‘he wanted to demonstrate the bravery of Vietnamese troops and [the] power of Communism by showing how the Vietnamese were able to humble the Americans.’
“The Cambodian explained that on the morning of Sept. 12, he and the other officials left the Hanoi Central Party Committee office and drove for about 15 minutes. He said the officials’ eyes were covered during the entire trip and remained covered until the group was inside the underground facility. He described the prison as being 100 by 100 meters in size and said he was told it contained a total of 38 cells. He said he and the others personally observed the Americans in three of these cells, approximately 100 to a cell. He said the Americans appeared to be in their late 30s and were ‘very slender and pale with long beards.’ Some were bald. All were dressed in blue civilian clothes and some used canes.”
John J. Tobak
MADISON
Roxbury CARE candidate responds to TEAM letter
This letter is in response to one written by Craig Heard and printed on July 7.Sour grapes, Mr. Heard? Sounds like you’re still smarting about the last Roxbury Board of Education election results. In case you forget, you and your TEAM lost. The voters of Roxbury voted for the CARE candidates two-to-one. Is that hard to accept?
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