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Planes Come Home, But Finding The Pilots Is More Difficult

Skyrocketing Interest In Warbirds Leave Some Flyers' Remains In Limbo

The US Military spends hundreds of millions of dollars to locate the remains of missing aviators from World War II, but they often find themselves in a race against collectors and salvagers hoping to restore vintage airplanes.

The Boston Globe looked into the United States Government's efforts to locate and recover pilots lost during the war, and the problems they face when the aircraft are discovered first by private individuals. The paper reports much of the interest is focused around Papua, New Guinea, where some of the war's most ferocious air battles were fought. Estimates are that the jungle there could hide as many as 2,200 lost pilots.

Demand for restored warbirds, such as the P51 Mustang and the P38 Lightning, has driven prices through the roof, and salvage for parts can be critical to those trying to restore the planes, sometimes to flying condition. One of those is Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, owner of at least 15 restored warbirds. Through a spokesman, Allen told the Globe that it is unlikely parts used to restore his aircraft came from overseas salvagers. He said there is a good supply of unused spare parts in the United States.

Pentagon officials say the salvagers make their efforts to locate and bring home missing pilots much more difficult. Johnny Webb, the top civilian official at the MIA Recovery Command and a Vietnam Veteran, said in the article that once a crash site has been disturbed, it is much more difficult to find clues as to the remains of the pilot and crew who flew the plane. His responsibility, he said, is to bring them home.

FMI: www.dtic.mil/dpmo

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