WASHINGTON (NNS) -- Secretary of the Navy Richard Danzig
has changed the status of Cmdr. Michael Scott Speicher from
Killed in Action/Body Not Recovered (KIA/BNR) to Missing in
Action (MIA). Speicher's F/A-18 aircraft was shot down by
enemy fire in the first day of the air war over Iraq on Jan.
17, 1991. He was placed in an MIA status the next day. On
May 22, 1991, following a Secretary of the Navy status
review board that found "no credible evidence" to suggest he
had survived the shootdown, his status was changed to
KIA/BNR.
In December 1995, working through the International
Committee of the Red Cross, investigators from the Navy and
Army's Central Identification Laboratory entered Iraq and
conducted a thorough excavation of the crash site. In
September 1996, based on a comprehensive review of evidence
accumulated since the initial KIA/BNR determination, the
Secretary of the Navy reaffirmed the presumptive finding of
death.
Over the years since that determination was made, the
Navy and the U.S. government have consistently sought new
information and continued to analyze all available
information to resolve Speicher's fate. This additional
information and analysis, when added to the information
considered in 1996, underscored the need for a new review.
Based on the review, Danzig has concluded that
Speicher's status should be "Missing in Action."