Pathfinder wrote:
I'll probably catch FLAK for writing this, but what the ....
It actually amazes me that JPAC is involved in the identification process. Granted they are right there...but come on...that is not their mission. They are tasked with the ID of US service personnel.
As far as WW2 goes, there are roughly 74,000 unaccounted for US personnel from that conflict. (Not to mention those from other conflicts)
JPAC budgets for ten (10) WW2 excavations a year....that's TEN.
If you consider that roughly half of those missing were from the Navy and went down with the ship--never to be recovered--that leaves about 37,000 land-based MIAs to be recovered. At the rate of ten a year that leaves JPAC with about 3,700 YEARS of work ahead of them.
They have a staff doing in-lab identifications---but that staff is limited. If you think the line at the DMV is long ask somebody on the inside how long it will take to even BEGIN the processing of remains brought in to JPAC today....the answer is (fill in the blank) YEARS. They have SHELVES FULL of remains awaiting processing.
I personally think it is a misallocation of time and effort to drop whatever anyone is doing at JPAC regarding US service personnel to run tests on an anonymous skull found in situ with forks and soda bottles.
A coworker and I have been to the JPAC lab and did a presentation on our Duck Hunt project. Early on we were talking to them frequently about trying to get their help ($$). As I was told by our contact there, like some other govt agencies, they generate follow-on year budgets in line item form. As I recall, they have cases lined up and prioritize them according to how strong the evidence is and where the remains are located. If able, a recon team will visit the location and do logistical work (names, local contacts, hotels, intel, local resources available, who to pay off, etc) prior to the recovery team coming in. A recent Prez mandate was signed saying the # of MIA recoveries per year was to increase to 200 (I think that was the number?). There was a decison memo waiting to be signed directing the DPMO Office in DC to start working MIA recoveries. I'm not sure where that's at. I'll speculate this possible Japenese MIA case will count towards the 200 goal.
You can get a tour of the JPAC lab. If anyone is ever in Hawaii, I highly recommend arranging a tour. Very, very fascinating work they do there. When I was there, they had a large, environmentally protected room with many white tables neatly organized. On most of the tables they had human remains neatly laid out in natural form. All the scientist and workers who enter these controlled rooms are dressed in white suits, hats and gloves to avoid spreading their own DNA inside the room. And yes....the scientists there can look at a bone or skull and with some certainty tell you about who that person is. I think one of the things that JPAC doesn't like doing (as I was told) is working mass graves. Those are supposed to be very intensive and difficult cases. It's all cool stuff for sure!!