Vietnam aches for its MIAs. Will America stop funding science to identify them?
'This tooth good?' asked a junior researcher, holding up a jawbone pulled from a grave.
'No, too decayed,' said his boss, an experienced geneticist. 'It has a copper dental crown.'
The search for around 2,600 missing Americans from the Vietnam War has been a first-order issue for Washington and Hanoi ever since the conflict ended. But on that humid June afternoon in northern Vietnam, grave diggers with doctorates were gathering the bones of Vietnam's own missing warriors, whose ranks exceed 1 million, with an urgency and reverence befitting a task long overdue.
The scientists were there to advance a recent breakthrough by putting it to use. A few months earlier, they and their partners -- including the International Commission on Missing Persons, in The Hague -- had figured out the chemistry and computing required to identify remains as badly degraded as those often found in Vietnam's acidic, tropical soil. For the first time, tiny snips of DNA taken from bones up to 70 years old could be used to link the country's fallen soldiers to distant relatives, unlocking lost truths and deeper healing.
Families from Vietnam's north and south, their anguish still festering 50 years after the war ended, could find reconciliation in graves where their war dead lie together. Americans still unaccounted for might be found, too, as Vietnam's identification efforts expanded. Methods honed locally could also extend far beyond Vietnam, to help identify those lost to wildfires, typhoons or other natural disasters worldwide.
'Groundbreaking,' said Tim McMahon, director of DNA operations for the U.S. Defense Department. That's how he described the new methods of accounting for the lost, adding: 'It's the next jump in identification.'
One thing that DNA analysis requires, however, is practice. Repetition at scale improves technique. But for Vietnam and the world, the opportunity that comes with the largest human identification project on the planet is now being threatened by the Trump administration's hostility toward foreign aid.
The five-year grant from the United States that had sustained Vietnam's DNA project -- paying for sequencing machines and collaborations with the U.S. military and the International Commission on Missing Persons -- was suspended with the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development in January. The restored money that's left runs out in September.
Before the disruptions, the scientists doing exhumations said they had aimed to identify 1,000 Vietnamese MIAs by July 11, the 30th anniversary of normalized U.S.-Vietnam relations. That, they believed, would prove what former enemies could accomplish by pursuing closure through science.
Now they are hoping for one.
What Vietnam Wants
Thousands of miles from Washington, in Ho Chi Minh City, Vu Thi Ninh Thuy, 42, shared a common Vietnamese war story.
A parade marking the 50th anniversary of the end of the conflict had just finished. As graying veterans strolled past the hotel where U.S. generals once briefed reporters on daily body counts, she brought up her uncle, who vanished while fighting the Americans in 1974.
Her eyes darting with emotion, she recounted how her childhood had been filled with exploratory trips south and north to look for him. Her family questioned his comrades. They visited local officials and eventually found a psychic who directed them, incorrectly, to a location not far from where we stood on that April morning.
'We all feel restless until we can find their remains,' she said. 'Everyone who is Vietnamese wants to bring their loved ones closer to home.'
Modern psychology teaches that 'ambiguous loss' -- where death remains unverified and without resolution -- freezes the grieving process, leading to chronic sorrow. In Vietnam, the pain is compounded by ancient beliefs.
The country's common practice of ancestor worship, with offerings left at graves and shrines, dictates that if the dead aren't interred with other ancestors, the person's soul wanders homeless and hungry. Burying and honoring the dead is considered an obligation of the living.
Vietnam's official efforts to account for those killed in the war have often been haphazard and hampered by bureaucracy. The remains of at least 300,000 fighters for North Vietnam have been found but not identified.
In 2014, the Vietnamese government took a major step toward addressing those shortcomings, announcing that it would invest $25 million in a DNA identification project. A new lab opened on the outskirts of Hanoi in 2019.
A year later, the International Commission on Missing Persons came on board. The project expanded with $7.4 million from USAID, awarded over five years, a fraction of what is spent annually to find and identify missing Americans.
Experts like Thomas Parsons have tried to fill gaps in the effort. Wiry and lean, with a frame easily lost in a lab coat, Parsons is a globally recognized authority on forensic genetics and the international commission's lead scientist in Vietnam.
When we met in March at the lab near Hanoi, he resembled a mountain climber with no mountain to climb. On a table, a NextSeq 1000, a 'high-throughput' sequencing system delivered in November at a cost of about $220,000, sat idle. It was one of many sophisticated machines covered in plastic after USAID's elimination.
Parsons and his Vietnamese colleagues stressed that U.S. foreign aid was not a handout, but rather a way to train Vietnam's researchers for an ambitious task using new genetic methods and technologies.
'We've already achieved a lot,' said Tran Trung Thanh, a molecular biologist and the lab's deputy director. 'We need more time to apply it in practice.'
The main breakthrough occurred a few months before President Donald Trump's inauguration with 23 Vietnamese bone samples degraded by age and tropical conditions. Using chemical solutions and high-tech analysis, scientists from the international commission found that 70% of the samples generated DNA profiles capable of being matched to a parent or child.
Several samples generated enough genetic material to connect with a single great-great-grandchild or even a first cousin's child or parent.
Before last year, 9 of every 10 Vietnamese bone samples yielded nothing identifiable.
'The breakthrough is the successful implementation in Vietnam of these tools that are emerging from the cutting edge of forensic science, in a context where other methods fail,' Parsons said.
Another scientist compared their work to searching for crumbs of a corn flake in a mountain of sand.
Duty and Doubts
Bob Connor, 78, a chatty Air Force veteran who lives near Philadelphia, signed up to fight Communists as a young man. More recently, he helped find a mass grave for their dead that he had heard about during a tour outside Saigon in 1968.
Since 2016, Connor says, he has located around 8,000 unidentified Vietnamese. The official tally of Americans who went missing during the Vietnam War is 2,646.
'The families are the key to the whole thing, from a standpoint that it's no different from our MIAs,' he said.
'Should we walk away from it -- hell no,' he added. 'We owe it to them.'
Since President Bill Clinton announced the restoration of diplomatic relations 30 years ago, Vietnam has handed over more than 1,000 sets of American remains.
Ambassador Marc Knapper, the son of a Vietnam veteran, has lobbied behind the scenes for the United States to continue supporting Vietnam's MIA program. The International Commission on Missing Persons also wrote to Secretary of State Marco Rubio asking that funding be restored.
In March, the project received a partial reprieve. U.S. officials told scientists that they would receive the money allotted through the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.
A State Department spokesperson said that maintaining 'the right mix of programs to support U.S. national security and other core national interests of the United States requires an agile approach.'
Even without such uncertainty, the U.S.-Vietnam relationship has already been battered. Vietnam and the United States on Wednesday reached a preliminary agreement that will add tariffs of 20% to 40% on imports from Vietnam -- a major blow for its economy that follows sharp cuts in foreign aid for health, education and the environment.
Trump's approach 'has shaken Vietnamese confidence in the United States,' said Tim Rieser, a former adviser to then-Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., a key figure in U.S.-Vietnam reconciliation. 'They have told us the Chinese are already stepping into the vacuum.'
Reduced ambitions for partnership with the United States are increasingly the norm.
Instead of requesting another five-year grant, the International Commission on Missing Persons has requested $3 million from the United States to keep the project going for 12 to 18 months.
'If we don't receive funding beyond September,' Kathryne Bomberger, the commission's director general, said in an interview, 'the program will probably end.'
If that happens, American remains commingled with those of Vietnamese soldiers may never be found, and growth in humanitarian identification will be stunted. Families on the cusp of clarity will remain in limbo for longer, and possibly forever.
At the cemetery in the country's north, the scientists soldiered on, maintaining faith in their grisly labor.
They had just a few weeks to make an identification, maybe for remains from the 'American War,' maybe from a war against China in 1979.
On their final day, a family appeared, laying out fruit and dove-white flowers and lighting incense at the grave of a soldier lucky enough to have been buried with a name.
Thanh, the project's deputy director, watched quietly as the scratch of shovels on dirt mingled with birdsong.
'We just want to bring certainty,' Thanh said. 'To give people information they've never had.'
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Copyright 2025
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USA Today
3 hours ago
- USA Today
Cuts to NOAA funding could imperil weather forecasts, endanger lives
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'We're going to stagnate and we're not going to continue to improve as we go forward.' The atmospheric research office, also referred to as NOAA Research, underpins much of the agency's work and scientific advances, whether it's more accurate forecasting or tracking tsunamis or plumes of chemicals or wildfire smoke, said Franklin and others working to persuade Congress to save the programs. They say defunding the research program would carry great costs − forecast improvements have saved as much as $5 billion per storm − and put lives at risk when forecasts fall short. Dozens of private weather forecasters, TV meteorologists and scholars have expressed similar concerns in social media, broadcasts, blogs and newsletters, saying the degradation of forecast accuracy will affect farmers, aircraft pilots and passengers and millions of other Americans, whether they know it or not. 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The launches provide crucial information about moisture and prevailing winds in large systems crossing the country that could steer or interact with approaching tropical systems, Franklin said. 'If they pass through an area with less balloon coverage, the forecast might change a bit and get degraded." The larger the area with missing data, he said, the greater the risk of error in a hurricane landfall forecast. Experts say better forecasts save money and lives Franklin and others cited a 2024 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research that found NOAA's Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program has saved roughly $5 billion per hurricane per year in terms of pre-landfall protective spending and post-landfall damages and recovery. "Hurricane response costs become greater when you have a poorer forecast,' he said. 'That's a lot of cost savings that we seem willing to give up here. We're going to turn off all that potential savings by saying we don't care if the forecasts don't continue to get better.' Dinah Voyles Pulver covers climate change, hurricanes and disasters for USA TODAY. Reach her at dpulver@ or dinahvp.77 on Signal.


National Geographic
5 hours ago
- National Geographic
It may be possible to detect Alzheimer's risk sooner—as early as your 20s
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However, the damage may be slowed if caught early. Now a new study cautiously suggests it may be possible to detect signs of Alzheimer's risk even earlier than previously thought possible—in a person's 20s or 30s. Given the number of Americans with Alzheimer's is projected to double to 14 million by 2060, this could be a gamechanger. 'A neuron dead is a neuron gone…forever. You want to do preventive medicine,' says Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas, a professor at the University of Montana in the Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Department, who was not involved with the new study but says its findings coincide with her team's research into early Alzheimer's detection. (Your eyes may be a window into early Alzheimer's detection.) 'The key is the age group: young adults,' Calderón-Garcidueñas says. 'Most researchers in the U.S.A. are focused on elderly populations.' Scientists have made leaps and bounds to diagnose Alzheimer's accurately and faster. 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The team also found higher CAIDE risk scores were associated with lower cognitive scores as early as during someone's mid-20s—decades earlier than mid-life, when risk factors are typically tested. 'The study is a big success,' says Tatjana Rundek, director of the Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Institute at the University of Miami, who was not involved with the study. While effect size is small and associations are subtle, it still provides 'compelling molecular support for early neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration.' Study limitations However, some experts are more cautious. Despite its validation, Rundek says CAIDE isn't a sure-fire predictor of Alzheimer's disease, especially regarding diverse populations. Meanwhile, some of the biomarkers found are not exclusive to Alzheimer's, says Sharon Sha, a neurology professor and the chief of Stanford University's Memory Disorders Division. (What your biological age can reveal about your health.) Sha points out that the study measured 'total tau' instead of phosphorylated tau; while total tau can be an indicator of neurodegeneration, growing research finds phosphorylated tau to be more predictive of Alzheimer's specifically. Still, she says, 'I do find that the results they found are potentially risk factors for future cognitive decline, or cardiovascular and vascular cognitive impairment risk.' The data collection is also impressive, Sha adds. Conducting these studies is difficult because obtaining confirmatory data is costly and takes decades. 'It's hard to follow someone in their 20s, to say, their 60s or 80s, [to see] if they get a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease.' Aiello also agreed more research needs to be done, and that's likely coming. Other scientists in the U.K. have conducted life course studies, Aiello says, and 'I think we'll see more of these types of studies in the future.' Her own team is continuing to follow this cohort to see how Alzheimer's risk changes over time. As participants enter the latest wave, when they are between the ages of 39 to 49, they'll take cognitive tests and measure physical and sensory functions like hearing or grip strength. The data is scheduled for analysis with results potentially forthcoming in 2026. Early detection can empower people. Those at greater risk can start changing their lifestyles—and some healthy interventions may prevent or slow up to 40 percent of dementia cases. Current Alzheimer's therapies like lecanemab also slow decline, though in milder stages. 'The earlier the better, right?' Aiello says. (Why this new Alzheimer's drug is eliciting both optimism and caution.) Consequently, early detection remains a hot research topic. In 2023, researchers published a study cautiously suggesting the eyes have potential for early Alzheimer's risk prediction. Another 2024 study published in Nature Aging showed an AI-trained model could predict Alzheimer's seven years before symptoms emerged, and identified surprising patterns and risk factors. The model suggested that osteoporosis may be an Alzheimer's risk factor for women. While this doesn't mean a woman with osteoporosis will definitely develop Alzheimer's, 'we see these relationships,' says Alice Tang, an MD/Ph.D. candidate at University of California, San Francisco, who led the study. 'And so that has led to a lot more questions being opened up and better studies down the line.' Ultimately, research avenues like these may soon be able to help scientists develop a more meaningful model for early Alzheimer's prediction. In her own work, Aiello is excited to see what Wave VI reveals. 'I think it's going to be really exciting for people to try to tease apart some of these associations much earlier in life, in a really kind of in-depth way.'

USA Today
6 hours ago
- USA Today
Trump 'Big Beautiful Bill' provides $85 million to move a NASA space shuttle. Here's where
Discovery, which made its inaugural flight in 1984, completed 39 missions before it retired in 2011. Discovery's days of spaceflight may long be over, but the historic NASA space shuttle may soon be on the move again – just not in orbit. As part of Republicans' massive tax and spending legislation signed by President Donald Trump, the space shuttle Discovery is due to depart its home of 13 years at a Smithsonian museum in Virginia. Ahead of the iconic spacecraft? About a 1,400 mile journey across the country to its new home in Texas. The provision, first introduced by of Texas Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn, was added to the Senate's version of the legislation, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill, as part of an additional $10 billion in funding for NASA. The funding is separate from NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 budget request, under which the space agency would see its funding slashed by nearly 25%. Here's what to know about the space shuttle Discovery, and what may be ahead for the vehicle as lawmakers look to transport it to Texas. What is the space shuttle Discovery? Discovery, which made its inaugural flight in 1984, completed 39 missions before it retired in 2011 as the oldest and most-used orbiter in U.S. history. During its career, Discovery shuttled 184 astronauts into space and back, many of whom flew more than once. Discovery also launched the Hubble Space Telescope in 1990 and helped in the assembly of the International Space Station, which has been orbiting about 250 miles above Earth for more than two decades. All of Discovery's launches took place at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Where is NASA's Discovery shuttle displayed? After NASA's Shuttle program ended in 2011, the space agency selected museums to display all of the retired spacecraft. Since 2012, Discovery has been on display at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia. Three other shuttles are also on display in the U.S.: Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' would transfer Discovery to Texas Trump's legislative package, which he signed into law on Independence Day, includes a provision that allocates $85 million to move Discovery from Virginia to Texas. The spacecraft's new home is now due to be at Space Center Houston, the official visitor center for NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The center is already home to a replica of the space shuttle Independence, formerly known as Explorer, that visitors are able to step inside. Cruz and Cornyn were the first to introduce the effort in April to relocate Discovery with their "Bring the Space Shuttle Home Act." The legislation provides "no less than $5 million" to move the shuttle to its new home, with the remaining $80 million set to go toward building a new facility to house and display the vehicle. However, the Smithsonian's estimate to Congress was that it would cost between $300 million and $400 million of taxpayer dollars to move Discovery across the country. The law also sets a deadline of Jan. 4, 2027, for the transportation of the space shuttle to be completed. Why do lawmakers want to move space shuttle to Houston? Texas lawmakers have long believed that because Houston is home to mission control for NASA's space shuttle program, the region is deserving of recognition with a space shuttle of its own to display. Cornyn called the provision to bring Discovery to Texas "long overdue" in a statement. 'Houston has long been the cornerstone of our nation's human space exploration program," Cornyn said in the statement. 'I am glad to see this pass as part of the Senate's One Big Beautiful Bill and look forward to welcoming Discovery to Houston and righting this egregious wrong.' In a seperate statement, Cruz said the legislation honors Houston's legacy as "the heart of America's human spaceflight program." "Bringing such a historic space vehicle to the region would underscore the city's indispensable contributions to our space missions, highlight the strength of America's commercial space partnerships, and inspire future generations of engineers, scientists, and pioneers who will carry our legacy of American leadership in space," Cruz said. Contributing: Sarah D. Wire, USA TODAY Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@