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Cold Sun: The Search for World War II Airmen Lost in a Tibetan Glacier [Kietas viršelis]

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In January 1944, a US Army Air Corps transport, en route to its home base in India, crashed into a snowfield in Tibet, killing all crew members. Because of the remote location and fierce winter weather, the aircraft was covered by heavy snowfall. The snowfield glaciated, completely hiding the aircraft until its accidental discovery by a Tibetan hunter in 1993. A nearby Chinese army garrison launched an immediate reconnaissance into the crash site and brought out remnants of the airplane and remains of the crew. They then notified the American Embassy in Beijing.

Then-Colonel William H. Jordan, commander of the US Army Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii, was assigned to investigate the crash site and to recover, identify, and repatriate the remains of the fallen US servicemen. Cold Sun: The Search for World War II Airmen Lost in a Tibetan Glacier is Jordan’s recounting of the events surrounding the recovery, including the final, solemn duty of officially informing the lost crewmen’s family members—by this time in middle age or older—of the fate of their loved ones. He weaves the mission of the aircraft and crew’s fate through the prism of America’s history of identifying and recovering their fallen warriors, the efforts over the years, and technological leaps needed to finally accomplish this grim, necessary mission.

Inspiring and informative, based in the personal reflections of Jordan and the others involved, Cold Sun tells the gripping story of a tragic loss, a harrowing recovery effort, and the human efforts involved.

Foreword xi
Mac Thornberry
Preface: The Hunter, September 1993 xiii
Reflections: A Retrospective Overview 1(8)
Part One Legacy
Chapter 1 "Bring My Boy Home"
9(4)
Chapter 2 Foreign Shores, Global Conflict
13(6)
Chapter 3 On Their Shields
19(5)
Chapter 4 Known but to God
24(8)
Chapter 5 "Ain't Our Fight"
32(7)
Chapter 6 Operators
39(12)
Chapter 7 The Last "Peaceful" Season A Pilot's Odyssey
51(8)
PART TWO CRUCIBLE
Chapter 8 Postwar Vietnam and the United States
59(14)
Chapter 9 A Bloody Shirt
73(16)
Chapter 10 Politics, Policy, and Follies
89(20)
PART THREE MATURATION
Chapter 11 Antagonists
109(12)
Chapter 12 Over the "Rockpile"
121(7)
Chapter 13 Breaking a Logjam Desert Storm and the Senate Select Committee
128(5)
Chapter 14 Cilhi Search, Recover, Identify
133(6)
Chapter 15 The Third Incarnation of the JPRC--the JTF-FA
139(14)
Chapter 16 Closed States, Closed Gates, and Deadly Pyres
153(6)
Chapter 17 A Nation Ascendant, a Nation Eclipsed
159(26)
PART FOUR CONTINGENT
Chapter 18 Chinese Winter
185(37)
Chapter 19 "Reckon That's about the Size of It, I Guess"
222(3)
Chapter 20 Futile Hope, Quagmired Nation
225(5)
Chapter 21 A Jorhat Crew's Cautionary Tale
230(6)
Chapter 22 Refining of the Pilots
236(21)
PART FIVE RESURRECTION
Chapter 23 Maelstrom
257(9)
Chapter 24 Rough Road, Rough Garrison
266(34)
Chapter 25 Glaciers and Snowfields
300(18)
Chapter 26 Bringing Them to Life
318(13)
Chapter 27 Sacred Searchers
331(10)
Epilogue "This Is a Holy Place" 341(14)
Acknowledgments 355(6)
Notes 361(12)
Bibliography 373(4)
Index 377
William H. Jordan served in the Joint Casualty Resolution Center from 1987 through 1989, charged with leading the first recovery and forensic identification of US service personnel remains in Southeast Asia after the end of the Vietnam War. He also held command of the US Army Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii, 199396, followed by time spent in the negotiations, US policy, and operational recoveries in Southeast Asia, Russia, North Korea, and Brazil. He is the recipient of the Combat Infantrymans Badge, the Air Medal, and the Bronze Star. He splits his time between western Kentucky and Idaho.