A U.S.-Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIA Affairs (USRJC) is making progress toward resolving unanswered questions on personnel missing and unaccounted-for from four separate wars. This positive development is evolving despite frayed nerves between these two nations over serious issues, from military involvement in Syria and the Ukraine, to politically-charged allegations of collusion and interfering with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

On November 8, the 21st Plenum of the USRJC met in Moscow at the Ministry of National Defense in their External Affairs facility. U.S. Co-Chairman General Robert “Doc” Foglesong, USAF (Ret), and Russian Co-Chairman General Colonel Valery Vostrotin led the talks. It was the first time that the director of the DoD’s Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) Kelly K. McKeague participated in the plenum as a U.S. commissioner. He was joined by two other U.S. Commissioners, Mr. Tim Shea, of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), and Dr. Tim Nenninger, National Archives & Records Administration (NARA).

DPAA European-Mediterranean Regional Director Col. Chris Forbes, USA, and Lt.Col. Maxim Alekseyev, Chief of the Russian Commission Support Office, Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., were key to setting up the important sessions, assisted by members of the DPAA Joint Commission Support Directorate. Invited to participate as observers were VFW Executive Director Bob Wallace and National League of POW/MIA Families CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors Ann Mills-Griffiths, an MIA sister.

This plenary followed USRJC technical sessions, just prior to the Russian Commission’s participation in the National League of POW/MIA Families’ 48th Annual Meeting in June, as well as the August DPAA-hosted Korean War/Cold War Annual Government Briefings, both held in the Arlington/D.C. area.

In his opening remarks at the plenary, General Vostrotin mentioned the ongoing digitization of Soviet military records and the work of Russian staff in its Washington office memorializing at least 139 Russian servicemen buried in the U.S., mainly from the 19th century, and efforts to erect a “Project Zebra” Catalina Lend-Lease memorial in Elizabeth City, N.C. Project Zebra was a secret WWII U.S. Navy program that flew pilots and crew members from the Soviet Union to Elizabeth City Coast Guard base in the last years of the war to train them on a modified version of the PBY Catalina aircraft to be used to find and destroy German submarines in the Atlantic Ocean.

In his opening remarks, Gen. Foglesong, who served 33 years in the Air Force, thanked the Russians for working together to set out the structure of future plenary sessions and four separate working groups that will meet quarterly in the future. The four working groups will focus separately on WWII, the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Cold War. He also thanked the Russians for allowing participation of VFW Executive Director Bob Wallace and League CEO/Chairman Ann Mills-Griffiths.

Wallace told SOFREP that he,

…was very impressed with the directness and persistence of U.S. Commissioners in pursuing answers concerning the fate of missing and unaccounted-for American service members. The U.S.-Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIAs is a functioning organization that remains mission-focused despite other issues that might divide our two countries.