Duck Soup:
MIA Mythology Run Amuck
Summary. At various times and places throughout the MIA
"activist" pantheon of barnyard excrement, one finds references to "Operation
Duck Soup." The specifics vary; one source tells one tale, another tells another.
Occasionally, the listener may be honored to talk with someone who claims to have really
been on Operation Duck Soup or to have known someone who was. A book by former Army
Captain George Veith masterfully adds to the confusion by describing events in Laos in
such a way to make it appear that he has discovered the truth about Duck Soup.
There are two common threads to the tales about Duck Soup.
First, there were two, possiblY three, US POWs captured in Laos in the
mid-1960s and held in caves near the Pathet Lao headquarters near Sam Neua. These
three were all USAF officers shot down while participating in the "secret war"
in Laos: David Hrdlicka (downed 18 May 1965), Charles Shelton (downed
29 April 1965), and Don Wood (downed 16 January 1966). Shelton and Hrdlicka
were known to have been captured and held in the Sam Neua caves. Reports from Commie
POWs and ralliers make it clear that both Shelton and Hrdlicka died within months of
capture from a combination of disease and malnutrition. There is no clear evidence
that Wood was captured, though an excavation of his crash site yielded no remains and his
identification card was found in a Lao military museum. According to legend, Duck Soup was
intended to rescue one or all of these men.
The second common thread to Duck Soup stories is that one or more US
POWs were rescued then -- get this -- they were turned back over to their captors.
(Sorry folks, I don't make up this stuff. I just report it.)
Okay, so, what are the facts? As with the rest of this MIA issue, it is
not simple. Stay with me while I lay out some facts.
What Was Operation Duck Soup, Really?
There were three operations named Duck Soup.
- The first Duck Soup ran for several years after the end of WWII, took place in
an Asian country, and had nothing to do with prisoners of war or missing in action.
- The second was some sort of logistic operation during the Korean War.
- The third was during the Vietnam War. It seems that the North Vietnamese were
using small aircraft -- similar to our Bird Dogs and Beavers, to fly into some airstrips
in northern Laos. The USAF wanted to shoot down one of these and that operation was called
Duck Soup.
What is the Claimed Duck Soup?
The Duck Soup POW rescue mission, according to various MIA activists, was an
attempt to rescue one or more of the Americans listed above. Their claims are based
on several pieces of evidence.
- The wife of one of these MIAs claims that she was told by an old friend that US teams on
the ground had access to the prisoners. She further claims that she was in touch with
"other pilots coming back from Vietnam" who told her about rescue operations in
progress or being planned. This same lady claims that the Defense Department later
told her that there had been no such rescue operations.
- A retired USAF two-star reportedly told a California newspaper that Duck Soup was a
rescue mission. Of course, I have yet to see a citation as to exactly what this
office was doing in 1965. If he was a retired two-star in 1992, at the time of his
interview, then he would have been, possibly, a lieutenant in the mid-1960's.
- There are two messages from the US Ambassador in Laos, William Sullivan. The
activists quote only one of these messages.
Sullivan's Messages
As part of the "secret war" in Laos, the US supported the Hmong tribe as an
indigenous force against the Pathet Lao. The correct name for these folks is their
tribal name, Hmong. Often, though, they are called "Meo," a Laotian term
meaning "barbarian." We provided training, equipment, and missions to this
secret army. The Hmong, who could move fairly freely through some areas of Laos,
occasionally even through areas under PL or PAVN control. The Hmong were used to
search for downed US personnel, to investigate crashes, and, if a POW rescue were
attempted, the Hmong would likely have been involved.
In the cable traffic from the embassy in Laos is a message dated June 20, 1965.
Here is a partial quote from the cable, from Ambassador Sullivan:
QUOTE
"Our mighty Meo report from on the their outposts in Sam Neua
that they have succeeded in recapturing one of the U.S. pilots captured during past few
weeks by Pathet Lao . . . I would like to stress overwhelming importance that this rescue
not be given any publicity . . . This officer is only one of three for which we currently
have Meo rescue operations in progress."
END QUOTE
Let's examine this message.
First, why does Sullivan use the phrase "mighty Meo"? Suggests to me
that he may not have had full confidence in these folks.
Second, why does he not want this report publicized? Two reasons. First,
the ambassador may well have had some doubts about the validity of the information and he
wanted to check it out before any public announcement was made. Second, he probably
wanted to keep the report secret to ensure security of one or more on-going operations.
If we had publicized that the Hmong (Meo) had rescued a US POW, the PL and NVA
could easily have tightened up security to make certain that no further rescues occurred.
So, in spite of the best attempts of some activists and at least one author to make
this appear as a sinister action on Sullivan's part, in fact, the ambassador was taking
prudent actions.
Third, his comment that there were other operations in progress is important because it
shows that US agencies in Laos were, in fact, attempting rescue operations.
Now, the Duck Soup mythmakers allege that one US POW was rescued as evidenced in this
message. Why did he not emerge? Well, they say, he was returned to his
captors. I have not a clue as to where this bit of nonsense originated but
that is what they story says.
The answer to what happened to this "rescued US POW" really lies in another
cable from the ambassador on August 13, 1965-- one that none of the
activists will talk about.
QUOTE
"We have reluctantly concluded that original report received
here about June 21 concerning recovery of missing USAF pilot by friendly team was based on
faulty information and must now be considered untrue. Several attempts to confirm or
follow up this report have proved fruitless and passage of time makes it most unlikely
that friendly forces had in fact recaptured American pilot. Therefore believe we can
turn over names of two pilots missing over Laos (Hrdlicka and Shelton) to ICRC (Red Cross)
rep for investigation with PL authorities."
END QUOTE
That's it, folks. The first report was not true. No US POW had been rescued
but those who spread the "Operation Duck Soup" tale don't want you to know that
so they quote only the first message then they tell their tale about giving him back to
explain why no one was rescued.
Dissembling
One explanation for the "gave them back" claim may be found in some
dissembling done in Veith's book, Code Name Bright Light, cited above. In
all his citations about Shelton, Hrdlicka, and Wood, and in all his quoting from official
documents, nowhere does Veith cite the evidence from ralliers and captives that Shelton
and Hrdlicka died in captivity. Guess that would have been too inconvenient.
On pages 81 - 82 of the paperback version of Veith's book, he quotes from two
handwritten notes that allegedly were in Shelton's case file. I reviewed Shelton's
file several times and do not recall these notes, though I certainly do not remember every
document in the file.
- First note quoted by Veith says: "[redacted] 6136 (Sep 66)
Collecting info to launch rescue of US pers in prison camps (word illegible) sent back
into area."
- Second note quoted by Veith says: "At the request of Mrs.
McAfee, DIA, a research (sic) was conducted to ascertain whether or not any rescue
attempts was (sic) made on the prison camp located at Ban Nakay Neua, Laos to free Charles
E. Shelton. . . An intelligence collection effort was conducted in September 1966 into
this particular area but no actual attempts were conducted to rescue the detainees in this
camp."
If one were so inclined, the phrase "sent back into the area" in the first
quote could be claimed to be an indicator that the a US POW was rescued then sent back.
In fact, it is clear from reading the portion of the note reproduced in the book
that it was an intell collection team who was sent back.
Well, Did It Happen Or Not?
There clearly were plans to rescue US POWs in Southeast Asia. Clearly, there was
intelligence collection aimed at generating or supporting plans and, just as clearly,
there were some rescue attempts. But, as for an Operation Duck Soup in which a US
POW was freed from captivity in Laos then turned back over to his captors, it never
happened.
Duck Soup in Laos was an attempt to bag North Vietnamese light aircraft used to
resupply their forces in Laos. The fact that the operation occurred at the same time
that US agencies in Laos were trying to locate and possible rescue US POWs is pure
coincidence, in spite of the best efforts of the mythmakers to prove otherwise.
So, What's the Harm in a Big Lie?
Think that no one gets hurt by this stuff? Think again.
As many of you know, USAF Captain Charles Shelton was shot down in Laos and captured.
Shelton died after a short time in captivity, from disease and malnutrition. US search
efforts have located where he was held and buried but the passage of time, our wartime
bombing, and agricultural use has changed the landscape so that it is probably impossible
to recover his remains. After the war, the Secretary of the Air Force was reviewing cases
that had been recommended to him for closure with a presumptive finding of death.
Shelton's case was the last one he reviewed and he determined that Shelton would be
continued in a POW status as a symbolic gesture. Shelton's family continued to
receive his pay, he continued to be promoted.
Shelton's wife was the target of all sorts of scam artists. She provided financial
support to a number of individuals, each claiming to be on some sort of rescue mission. As
a result of her husband being listed as a POW, she became a lightning rod for all sorts of
idiots. One particularly loathsome incident occurred when a group approached her with the
story that, in a secret operation named Duck Soup, her husband had been rescued and
then returned to his captors.
On October 4, 1990, Marian Shelton sat at her kitchen table, wrote a letter to her
children, took off the POW bracelet she had never removed, and shot herself . She was
buried in Arlington National Cemetery. The children asked the USAF to review their
father's case and he was declared dead. And that, folks, is the legacy of MIA mythology.
Of course, the folks who promulgate this crap all claim that they are
working in the best interests of the families.
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