Name: Tanos E. Kalil
Rank/Branch: U.S. Civilian
Unit:
Date of Birth: 08 August 1929
Home City of Record:
Date of Loss: 08 February 1969
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 104936N 1065628E (YS126965)
Status (in 1973): Prisoner of War
Category: 1
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: Auto
Refno: 1375
Source: Compiled from one or more of the following: raw
data from U.S.
Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA
families,
published sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W.
NETWORK in 1998.
Other Personnel In Incident: John J. Fritz; James A. Newingham (both released)
REMARKS: 690613 DIC; ON PRG LIST
SYNOPSIS: Tanos E. Kalil, John J. Fritz and James A. Newingham
were three
U.S. civilians captured by Viet Cong forces on February
8, 1969 in Bien Hoa
Province, South Vietnam. The three were held together
as captives.
In 1973 Operation Homecoming occurred and 591 Americans
were released by the
Vietnamese. Two of those lucky Americans were John Fritz
and James
Newingham. John Fritz told of having been tortured and
repeatedly thrown in
a pit with snakes and scorpions. Being held in South
Vietnam and Cambodia
had its own horrors. Fritz and Newingham were lucky to
be alive.
The two also told of Tanos Kalil's fate. In April 1969,
they reported, Kalil
fell ill with kidney problems. Because of poor medical
attention and even
poorer diet, the illness grew more serious and he ultimately
died in June
1969 and was buried near camp.
The Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG) listed
Tanos Kalil as a
prisoner who had died while in captivity. They did not
return his remains to
U.S. control. For over 20 years, the U.S. has been unable
to bargain for
even those Americans known to have been held captive
and now are deceased.
Many consider this an outrage.
Even more outrageous, certainly, is the mounting evidence
that hundreds of
Americans are still alive in Southeast Asia. While Vietnam
and the U.S. hold
talks which focus on the only remaining barrier to normalized
relations
being Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia, families of
the nearly 2500 missing
men stand by in helpless horror.
[ssrep6.txt 02/09/93]
South Vietnam
Tanos E. Kalil
(1375)
On February 8, 1969, Mr. Kalil and two other civilian
technical
representatives, James A. Newington and John J. Fritz,
all under
contract to the U.S. Army's 34th General Support Group,
were
traveling in a convoy in the area of the town of Long
Thanh in Dong
Nai Province. Their convoy was ambushed by Vietnamese
communist
forces, and the three were captured.
Mr. Kalil was listed as a prisoner at the time of Operation
Homecoming. The Provisional Revolutionary Government
reported he
had died in captivity on June 13, 1969. His remains
have not yet
been repatriated.
Mr. Newington and Mr. Fritz returned alive from captivity.
They
reported that Mr. Kalil was extremely ill and incoherent
in June
1969 as a result of a kidney problem. On June 10,
he was given
four injections by camp staff; it appeared that he died
after those
injections. He was removed from the prison.
Guards later returned
and removed all Mr. Kalil's belongings. They said
he was merely
being taken to a hospital and was not dead.
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