BLASSIE, MICHAEL JOSEPH

REMAINS EXHUMED FROM TOMB OF THE UNKNOWN- IDENTIFIED O6/30/98

Name: Michael Joseph Blassie
Rank/Branch: 02/US Air Force
Unit:
Date of Birth: 04 April 1948
Home City of Record: St. Louis, MO
Date of Loss: 11 May 1972
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 114017N 1063428E
Status (in 1973): Killed in Action/Body not Recovered
Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: A37

Other Personnel in Incident: None Missing

Source: Compiled by P.O.W. NETWORK 06 September 1996 from one or more of the
following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.

REMARKS:

[US Veterans Dispatch 1996]

In 1984, as a result of the U.S. government's eagerness to lay to rest a
Vietnam Unknown Soldier, it interred the remains of a missing American
serveicemen that today can be identified and accounted for through the U.S.
government Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii (CIL-HI).

The interment of that "unidentifiable" U.S. servicemen in Arlington National
Cemetery, beside the Unknown from World War I, World War II and Korea was
supposed to be the ultimate symbolic gesture in healing the POW/MIA issue,
the Vietnam War's "sorest wound."

Instead, as it turns out, the entombment of the Vietnam Unknown was at the
very best premature and at worst a politically expedient attempt to further
close the books on the POW/MIA issue.

On April 13, 1984, the Defense Department chose a Vietnam Unknown from one
of our sets of remains then at CIL-HI. Because of the progress in
identification techniques, the Defense Department waived an administrative
criteria, which had been followed in earlier wars,that only remains that
were 80% complete were selected as Unknown Soldiers. With today's
advancements in technology and with CIL-HI boasting of its ability to
identify remains of American servicemen from evidence as minute as a tooth
fragment, remains that are 80% complete would be the worst choice for an
Unknown Soldier.

The remains finally chosen by CIL-HI to be the Vietnam Unknown had been
found by a South Vietnamese Army Reconnaissance team in late 1972 near An
Loc, Binh Long Province, which is located 60 miles north of Saigon. The
remains, which consisted of six bones, or only 3% of a skeleton, were
eventually given the number by CIL-HI of X-26. Along with the X-26 remains,
the reconnaissance team had brought in the remnants of a parachute, a flight
suit, a pistol holder and a one man inflatable raft.

CIL-HI determined that X-26 was a caucasian man who had been between 26 and
36 years old at the time of death.

In the surrounding area of An Loc where X-26 had been found, there had been
numerous American servicemen reported missing in action, bodies not
returned.

There was at least two C130s, several helicopters and an A37 fighter jet
that went down in that general area during the war prior to the Fall of
1972. The remnants which were found with the bone fragments of X-26 are
important pieces of a puzzle which when placed together point specifically
to the identification of the Unknown Soldier of the Vietnam War.

The piece of a flight suit indicates that the Vietnam Unknown was an airman
and evidence of the existence of a parachute rules out the possibility of a
helicopter crew, thus focusing on the aircrews of the C130's and the pilot
of the lone A37. The existence of a one man inflatable raft can be argued as
a strong reason to rule out the crews of the C130s, leaving only the pilot
of the A37, who would have been equipped with a one man raft.

In May 1972, near An Loc, an A37, flown by U.S. Air Force let. Michael J.
Blassie was hit by ground fire. Lt. Blassie's wingman saw him crash into
the ground and witnessed an explosion and fire. He did not see any signs
that indicated the survival of Lt. Blassie.

In October, 1972, the U.S. government sent a search team to the crashsite
(probably in response to the remains recovered by the South Vietnamese
Reconnaissance team) and found "identification media that correlated to the
case."

In November, 1992, the U.S. government again visited the area of the
crashsite, and found a witness who had heard about the incident. The
witness, according to a U.S. government source, took U.S. government
representatives to what was believed to be the exact crashsite. The
crashsite, according to the source, had been severely scavenged and U.S.
government investigators were unable to find anything significant pertaining
to the Blassie incident. The crash crater, according to the source, was
being used by a local farmer for a watering hole.

Many facts pertaining to Lt. Blassie's shootdown closely match those of the
Unknown Soldier. CIL-HI determined the Unknown Soldier to be a male
caucasian and between 26-33 years old. Lt. Blassie, was a male caucasian
who, at the time he became missing in action was 24 years old. Remnants
found with the remains of the Unknown Soldier indicate that he was a fighter
pilot. Lt. Blassie, from St. Louis, Mo., is the only fighter pilot listed
Killed-In-Action/Body-Not-Returned within a 2500 square mile area of where
the remains of the Unknown Soldier were found.

If the experts at CIL-HI can identify American MIAs from minute tooth
fragments, as they claim, then they should be able to right this wrong by
determining through DNA if the remains of Lt. Blassie is in the tomb of the
Vietnam Unknown.


[ap0705.98]
Ex-Unknown's Family Plans Burial
By NATALIE GOTT
The Associated Press

FLORISSANT, Mo. (AP) - Air Force pilot Michael Blassie's remains are coming
home at last, 26 years after his bomber was shot down in South Vietnam.

Defense Secretary William Cohen called Blassie's family Tuesday and
confirmed its long suspicion that the remains recently removed from the Tomb
of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery belong to Blassie.

The remains were identified through blood DNA tests.

"We have waited a long time to hear this formally," sister Pat Blassie
said at a news conference outside her mother's home in north St. Louis
County. "This is a significant day in our family's search for the truth.
We are finally going to bring Michael home."

Blassie was 24 and a lieutenant when his A-37 bomber was shot down near An
Loc in South Vietnam on May 11, 1972. His remains, which were classified as
unidentified, have rested until seven weeks ago in the Tomb of the Unknowns.

Chris Calhoon, a retired Army colonel who never knew Blassie, led a 1972
mission into the jungle to recover the remains.

He told The Associated Press earlier this year that he had no doubt the bag
of bones and personal effects that he threw into a helicopter as it was
mobbed by refugees and pummeled by enemy fire were those of Blassie.

The Army's Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii analyzed the four
ribs, pelvis and an upper arm and labeled them as "believed to be" those
of Blassie, but in 1979 the designation was removed when it was decided the
evidence was scant.

Blassie was then listed as "killed in action, no body recovered." His
remains were buried in the Tomb of the Unknowns on Memorial Day in 1984.

But the trail of evidence kept getting stronger, including Blassie's wallet
and dog tags found at the crash site. The family prevailed and the remains
were exhumed in May.

The Blassies want to have Michael's remains buried in the Jefferson Barracks
National Cemetery in St. Louis on July 11, when a tombstone will replace a
white marker bearing his name.

"He was good at everything he tried to do," said his mother, Jean Blassie.

George Blassie said his brother inspired: "He was a mentor. He was a hero.
He deserves to be known."



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