By Associated Press,
The Washington Post
Updated: Tuesday, August 7, 2012
SAN DIEGO — On a wind-swept bluff
overlooking the Pacific, Robert Rivenburgh sobbed like he never had in
the nearly four decades since his older brother went missing during the
Vietnam War.
The remains of Marine Pfc. Richard W. Rivenburgh had finally
come home, and he was buried Monday at Rosecrans National Cemetery in
San Diego.
“I wasn’t expecting it to impact me as much as it did,” Robert
Rivenburgh said after the service. “It just kind of all came back. We
had the service in 1975, and the tombstone has been here for more than
30 years but now when we visit we know he’s there. We know where he’s
at. We know he’s home. Everything’s good now.”
Richard Rivenburgh
was one of four Marines who remained missing for 37 years after a
helicopter carrying them was shot down in 1975 off the Cambodian coast.
Their remains were recovered from Southeast Asia in 2008 after U.S.
military officials received word that scavengers had buried them and
local people knew the location of the sites, the Marine Corps said.
The remains were positively identified in January.
Robert
Rivenburgh was 8 when his 21-year-old brother disappeared. He said he
was crushed when he heard the brother he had looked up to was missing,
and all that pain came rushing back to him during the Monday funeral
service with full military honors, including a 21-gun salute.
Robert
Rivenburgh, 46, was one of two siblings who attended the service with a
handful of nieces, nephews and other relatives, and about two dozen
veterans, mostly from the Vietnam conflict who belong to the group
Patriot Riders. Rivenburgh’s parents are deceased.
The veterans
stood in line, holding flags as the wooden, flag-draped casket carried
by six Marines in dress blues passed on the sunny afternoon. The hum of
Naval aircraft was heard in the background, doing training exercises for
today’s wars. Family members wore dog tags with Richard Rivenburgh’s
picture.
More than 83,000 Americans are still missing from past
conflicts, according to the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command. At any
given time, there are more than 1,000 files under investigation. The
recovered remains of more than 1,800 Americans have been identified
since the accounting effort began in the 1970s.
Richard Rivenburgh
went missing after Khmer Rouge gunboats captured the S.S. Mayaguez in
May 1975 in the Gulf of Thailand, about 60 miles off the coast of
Cambodia. The vessel was taken to Koh Tang Island, and on May 15, 1975,
the Air Force sent in 11 helicopters with troops to secure the island
and rescue the Mayaguez crew.
As the helicopter carrying
Rivenburgh neared the island, it was shot down with 26 men on board.
Half were rescued at sea, leaving 13 missing. In 1995, all but four of
the missing were recovered.
Lt. Col. Thad Trapp, who commands the
2nd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment — the same Marine Corps unit that
Rivenburgh was assigned to — said it’s important for troops fighting in
current wars to see the U.S. military will do all it can to not abandon
them.
“This instills an incredible level of confidence in the
institution,” he said after the service. “When we say we will never
leave a Marine behind, this just proves that.”
1 comment:
US got no business to go Vietnam at the first place...
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