Lewis Brackett (4 Jun 2023)
"American POWs were sent to Russian gulags"

American POWs were sent to Russian gulags

    After the Korean war, hundreds of American Pows  were never seen
again.  For all intents and purposes, our government had abandoned
them in the hands of the enemy.

    During the Vietnam war,  many Americans who  were seen being
captured in North Vietnam simply disappeared never to be seen again.
This has been the case throughout the cold war.  After the fall of the
Soviet Union, Russia opened its files to some extent. However if any
central record had ever been filed on these people, very little was
found. Except for a very lucky few, most westerners sent to the gulags
ever made it back home. In the early 90s I saw an interview with a
former Russian intelligence officer. He had been stationed at an
interrogation center for Americans captured in Vietnam and sent to
Russia. He said that there were always several Americans being
interrogated there. After a while they were always sent to the gulags.
As far as we know, none of them ever made it back home again. In his
two years at that center at least 200 American POWs came through that
place. The KGB always had agents imbedded in North Vietnamese field
army units to select POWs to be sent directly to Russia bypassing the
Hanoi prison camps.  To this day, literally thousands of our people
have disappeared into the Russian gulags never to be seen again.

   Every year I make calls send letters about them. Every year all I
get back is… silence.

   I ask that everyone reading this pray for the families of our lost
heros, for them to be comforted, reassured that we honor their
sacrifice. I also hope that some day our government will take
responsibility for their abandonment of our people to a lingering
death.

Lewis Brackett,  USCG veretan,  1966-70

https://www.deseret.com/2001/2/4/19567567/were-u-s-pows-held-in-rus

https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1992-11-12-1992317164-stor

https://communistcrimes.org/en/americans-soviet-prison-camps-narratives

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-07-29-mn-115-story.html