This story appeared
on-line on May 27, 2001 on the Starts & Stripes
website. (c) lies with Stars and Stripes.
Belgians' persistence leads to discovery
of graves of U.S. soldiers killed in WWII
Story and photos by Gregory Piatt, Stars and Stripes

A
cross marks the spot along the Siegfried
Line in the Monschau Forest in Germany where
the remains of three U.S. soldiers, who were
killed during the first days of Battle of
the Bulge, were buried. A Belgian team found
the shallow grave after deciding to look
across the road from where records and
veterans said the three were buried. |
HASSELPAT TRAIL,
Germany — It was here in the Monschau Forest, on the
north shoulder of the Battle of Bulge, that soldiers
from Company C of the 395th Infantry Regiment
fought, died and were buried during some of the
fiercest fighting of World War II.
Since the opening
days of the Battle of Bulge in December 1944, forest
mulch and 56-year-old battlefield debris have
covered these unmarked GI graves.
"Nobody knows how
many missing soldiers on both sides are still buried
in this forest," said David Roath, director of the
U.S. Army Memorial Affairs Activity Europe in
Landstuhl, Germany.
But the dwindling
number of Bulge veterans haven’t forgotten their
missing comrades from the 99th Infantry Division. A
team of four Belgian men hasn’t forgotten them,
either.
Since the
mid-1980s, the Belgians have volunteered their time
to scour this battlefield still speckled with the
foxholes and pillboxes. Armed with metal detectors,
shovels and documents, they search for the remains
of 33 99th ID soldiers, who are still listed as
missing in action. The Belgians are members of the
99th Infantry Division Association and work through
the group’s MIA project.
"You won’t find
better guys," said Vernon Swanson, author of "Up
Front with Charlie Company, a Combat History of
Company C 395th Infantry Regiment."
"They are out there
practically every weekend, and they have jobs and
families. But they do it because they want to
remember the GIs who liberated their country."

The
Diggers, as they are known by the 99th
Infantry Division Association, scour the
Battle of the Bulge battlefield in Belgium,
Germany and Luxembourg looking for remains
of World War II soldiers missing in action.
They are, from left to right, Jean-Philippe
Spedem, Marc Habique, Jean-Louis Seel and
Jean-Luc Menestrey. |
The Diggers, as the
99th Infantry Division Association calls the
Belgians, have had some success finding a couple of
missing soldiers since 1988. But recently they made
a big discovery, finding the remains of three
Company C soldiers, who died on Dec. 15 and 16,
1944, and whose bodies subsequently disappeared.
"It was like
looking for a needle in a haystack," said Digger
Jean-Louis Seel of the search for the three.
Off and on for
nearly a decade, the Diggers looked for the three
GIs near an aid station where medics checked
soldiers’ feet for frostbite and trench foot during
the battle. But after repeated attempts, they
couldn’t find the remains near the pile of discarded
boots that are still strewn on the Monschau Forest
floor.
Then, on April 11,
Seel went to search again. This time he looked
across the one-lane trail from the aid station.
There he found a grenade damaged by shrapnel and an
ammo belt, but left as night fell in the forest.
"I didn’t think I
was on the grave site," Seel said about the find
that day. "I was sure they removed the equipment
from dead soldiers."
Seel returned with
the full team on April 17. Within 10 minutes, Seel
unearthed a belt buckle. As he reached for the
buckle, Seel saw bones and began to shout.
"Stop, stop," Seel
called out. "I have one of them!"
"Are you sure, are
you sure it’s not a rock?" asked Marc Habique,
another Digger.
"I’m sure," Seel
replied.
The team checked
the remains’ dog tag and confirmed it was one of
three soldiers they had been looking for. German and
Army officials were called in and the remains with
dog tags of all three missing Company C soldiers
were found.

A
soldier salutes as the casket of one of
three soldiers killed during the Battle of
the Bulge is loaded into a van. The three
soldiers' remains were found recently by a
Belgian team working for the 99th Infantry
Division Association. |
However, V Corps,
the Diggers or members of the 99th ID Association
won’t make the names public until the Army
positively identifies the bones that are now at the
Memorial Affairs Activity in Landstuhl. But stories
on the association’s Web site identify two of three
privates who were missing.
"We would like to
officially identify the remains by Memorial Day,"
Swanson said in a phone interview last week from
Deerfield, Ill. "We hope the Army doesn’t take as
long to identify them as they did when the remains
of a soldier was found in the Huertgen Forest last
year. It took them a year to make an official
identification."
The night Pfc. Saul
Kokotivich died, Company C was bogged down in eight
inches of snow on the slope of what was later called
Hill 88 because the Germans fired so many 88 mm
artillery shells at the U.S. troops there. The
Americans fought from foxholes on this battlefield
of shattered tree trunks, shell craters and concrete
pillboxes.
The night before
the Bulge’s first assault, Kokotivich was preparing
for another night in a frozen foxhole. About 11:30
p.m. on Dec. 15, a barrage of 30 or 40 artillery
rounds rained down on the company, Swanson said.
Shells exploded around their positions and one
soldier yelled, "Something’s wrong with Koke,"
recalled Swanson, explaining how his comrades died
but not talking about the newly found remains.
"Koke was dying,"
said Swanson, even though he didn’t have any
injuries. Another soldier said Kokotivich, who was
married that October, died from a heart attack,
Swanson said. His corpse was carried to the aid
station the next morning.
On Dec. 16,
Swanson’s foxhole mate, Pfc. Jack Beckwith, returned
from the aid station where medics were checking for
trench foot or frostbite when an 88 mm shell fell
between them.
"I got the
concussion and it knocked me down," Swanson said
about the shell that killed his buddy from North
Dakota. "Jack got the shell fragments."
The third private
was attached to the regiment as a forward observer
and also died from artillery that day. On the
morning of Dec. 17, Company C was ordered to
withdraw and the frozen corpses of Kokotivich,
Beckwith and the unknown private were hurriedly
buried. Their graves were marked with their helmets
atop sticks.
After the war, some
marked graves were found and the GIs reburied.
However, these three remained MIA and now the
families and veterans are hoping to bring them home
after 56 years.
"I’ve been looking
for Jack’s remains since 1946, and the two others
for many years," Swanson said. "I will express
sadness and relief once they attach the names to the
remains because this has been an excruciating search
— a long marathon hopefully coming to end."
Source:
http://ww2.pstripes.osd.mil/01/may01/ed052701b.html |