May/June 2005
FEATURE |
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Tim Brown's Vow
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BY JIM BELSHAW |
In the early 1970s, Tim Brown saw
an advertisement in Leatherneck magazine. The parents of a
missing Marine sought anyone who might have known their son. Tim
Brown knew him. He had fought alongside him, and he knew the man
had died in the battle at Ngok Tavak.
Brown contacted the family and
found that the government had told them a story about their
son’s disappearance that Brown knew to be untrue. It would be
years before he became proactive about it. But when he did,
Brown invested the effort with the tenacity of a Marine
determined to abide by a central tenet of the Corps. That
perseverance and devotion to duty made him the driving force
behind the effort to find and return the remains of the men who
died at Ngok Tavak and then Kham Duc.
Brown says the ensuing years of
endeavor and his unyielding insistence on righting a wrong all
go back to a vow.
“It was hammered into all
soldiers, Marines in particular, that we never left our dead on
the battlefield,” he said. “I, along with others who were there
at Ngok Tavak, knew there wasn’t anything to be done at the
time. It was tactically impossible to do anything. But God put
me in the right place and the right time. I was lucky. I was
medevaced out of there well before the rest of them basically
got slaughtered. So guilt and a sense of responsibility and
sense of devotion to those guys I served with gave me the drive
to do what I could.”
In 1983, he became part of the
group that formed the first VVA chapter (137) in Texas. It was
the beginning of what Brown called “really catching the passion
and fire.”
POW-MIA issues energized him. He
researched the battles of Ngok Tavak and Kham Duc by obtaining
after-action reports and collecting notes from veterans of the
battles. He contacted men he served with.
"One led to another and I wound
up making contact with about eight veterans of my battery,” he
said. “I had to rely on that and oral histories of other guys to
put together the information that eventually led to the map that
we provided to the government on where the bodies were left at
Ngok Tavak.”
An official at the Joint POW/MIA
Accounting Command said the map of the Ngok Tavak battle
site—drawn by David Fuentes, a Ngok Tavak veteran who lives in
Chicago—proved to be crucially important in the location and
discovery of remains.
As Brown made his way through the
leadership ranks of VVA, he made contact with families of the
missing Marines and continued to research the battles. In the
mid-1980s, following his election to the national Board of
Directors, he brought the Ngok Tavak-Kham Duc issue to the
attention of Bill Duker, then chair of VVA’s POW-MIA committee.
“I asked him to bring the issue
to the government’s attention and request that it put some focus
and energy on it,” he said. “There was such a large number of
cases—13—associated with this single battle that it seemed to me
to make good sense to focus some energy and assets on it because
it potentially could resolve a large number of MIA cases.”
With the news that JPAC had begun contacting family members of
the missing, Brown expressed gratitude for all those who had a
hand in seeing the effort to a successful end, particularly Dan
Carr, Don Waak, Harry Albert, Bill Duker and all who have played
a role in the Veterans Initiative since its inception.