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Home » Blog » 17-year-old U.S. soldier who went missing in Korean War is accounted for
World

17-year-old U.S. soldier who went missing in Korean War is accounted for

Emily Davis
By Emily Davis
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A 17 -year -old soldier who was killed with a duration of the Korean war that Bone has represented for 75 years after he disappeared, authorities said Monday.

CPL Army. Albert J. Estrada was a member of Battery B, 57th Field Artillery Battalion, 31st Regiment Combat Team, 7th Infantry Infantry Division, the Pow/MIA Defense Accounting Agency said in a press release. The service began in July 1950, according to the Memorial of Veterans of the Korean War. He was one of tens of thousands or soldiers present at the Battle of Chosin in November and December 1950, said the DPAA.

Duration of the battle, 30,000 members of the United Nations Service, including American soldiers, faced 120,000 Chinese and North Korean enemy forces in “rugged land in a dead cold climate,” said the DPAA. The battle, which the DPAA described as “one of the most brut” of the entire war, broke out for 17 days.

449.jpg

CPL Army. Albert J. Estrada.

VETERANES MEMORIAL FOUNDATION OF THE Korea War


Army officials wanted to push North Korean forces to China and severe supply lines near the Chosin reservoir, said the DPAA. But North Korean forces launched a surprise attack that forced a group of soldiers to retire at the end of November. A few days later, Chinese soldiers surrounded and isolated another group or soldiers. A working force was hastily assembled to try to organize a withdrawal. A “bitter fight” allowed UN forces to open an airfield to bring reinforcements and evacuate casualties on December 1, according to the US Army., And anyone, UN soldiers achieved a complete retreat.

This time, he said more than 1,000 marines and soldiers from the United States this time, said the DPAA. Thousands more were injured or incapacitated by the cold climate. Due to the elements and the retirement, “hundreds of marines and fallen soldiers could not recover immediately,” said the DPAA.

Estrada was one of the soldiers who could not be located after the battle. He was reported as missing in December. 6, 1950. There was no information to indicate that he was once a hero as a war prisoner, said the DPAA. Three years later, on December 31, 1953, the US Army. UU. Issued a presumptive finding of death.

Coreanwar retreatreatfromchansinfoot.jpg

American Marines in Chosin.

Pow/MIA Defense Accounting Agency


Between 1953 and 1954, the North Korean government returned thousands of soldiers who had died in the Korean war. The remains had been buried in UN cemeteries in North Korea. The effort, known as Operation Glory, included the return of 500 sets of remains that had been buried near the Chosin reservoir. All but 126 of the remains were identified. The unidentified remains were buried as unknowns in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, said the DPAA.

From 1990 to 1994, the North Korean government returned 47 additional remains containers attributed to the battle of Chosin Reservoir. From these recovery efforts, the DPAA and the organizations that preceded it could identify around 130 of the personnel not counted by the person lost in the Chosin reservoir campaign.

The DPAA did not say what delivery of the remains of Estrada were recovered. A complete announcement of its accounting will be shared on a later date, said the agency.

Estrada obtained multiple military honors, including the Purple Heart, the National Defense Service Medal and the War Service Medal of the Republic of Korea, according to the Memorial Foundation of Veterans of the Korean War.

The surviving brothers of Estrada, Manuel Estrada and Ruth Tucker, have pressed for a long time for their identification, according to a 2018 article by The Daily Democrat. That year, Tucker was presented with a medal of the Republic of South Korea in honor of his efforts to give an account of the missing American soldiers who died in the Korean War. At that time, Tucker said Complete identification Or the remains of the Korean war can take between four and five years.

Kerry Breen

Kerry Breen is a news editor at cbsnews.com. Graduate of the Arthur L. Carter School of the University of New York, previously worked at NBC News’ Today Digital. She covers current events, the latest news and problems, including the use of substances.

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