Washington: South Korea and the United States have agreed to bolster cooperation in jointly searching for and repatriating the remains of soldiers killed while fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, the defense ministry in Seoul said Monday.
According to Yonhap News Agency, a delegation from South Korea’s Agency for KIA (Killed in Action) Recovery and Identification made the commitment during its annual talks with the U.S. Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) in Washington, D.C., last week. The discussions focused on joint cooperation in excavation projects.
During the talks, the two sides agreed to cooperate in the search and excavation of fallen soldiers from each country, as well as in forensic identification efforts. They also discussed the timing of planned repatriations of seven remains from the U.S. and three from South Korea, with next June or the July 27 U.N. Forces Participation Day considered as potential dates for the returns.
Additionally, both sides agreed to repatriate the remains of four Turkish war dead, currently held by the DPAA, to South Korea later this month. These remains will be laid to rest at the U.N. Memorial Cemetery in Korea located in the southeastern city of Busan in November.
Lee Keun-won, the head of the South Korean agency who led the delegation, also visited the Korean War Veterans Association in New Jersey and met with U.S. veterans who fought in the Korean War. South Korea and the U.S. have been holding the meeting annually since 2011 to enhance cooperation on the search operations for the remains of fallen soldiers from the Korean War.