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On January 23, 1968, a small U.S. Navy ship called the Pueblo was seized at sea by North Korean forces. One crew member was dead and 82 others were prisoners, destined to spend 11 months in North ...
Some of the surviving crewmembers of an American spy ship captured by North Korean forces 50 years ago have a message for President Trump: bring our warship home.
On the afternoon of Jan. 23, 1968, an emergency message reached the aircraft carrier Enterprise from the Navy vessel Pueblo, operating in the Sea of Japan. A North Korean ship, the message ...
Fifty years ago, North Korea took an extraordinary gamble against the United States when communist gunboats attacked and captured a Navy spy ship, the USS Pueblo. One American sailor was killed in ...
Survivors of the USS Pueblo are suing North Korea, 50 years after the American spy ship was seized off the Korean Peninsula and its crew held hostage and tortured for 11 months.
The Navy assigned no warships or combat aircraft to protect the Pueblo. The ship carried only small arms and two jam-prone .50-caliber machine guns to defend itself.
The crew of the Navy intelligence ship Pueblo reunited Thursday in San Diego to commemorate 55 years since North Korea captured the vessel. North Korea attacked and seized the Pueblo and its 83 ...
If you are younger than 50, you might never have heard of the Pueblo, the Navy spy ship Kisler served on during one of the darkest moments of the Cold War. But 40 years ago this week, North Korea ...
The outgunned, 345-ton, 177-foot Navy spy ship was running an electronic surveillance mission for the National Security Agency in international waters some 14 miles off the North Korean coast when ...
And the gravestone identified Bucher as a former prisoner of war, a designation that the Navy once sought to deny him out of embarrassment that Bucher had surrendered his ship, the Pueblo, without ...
On the 50th anniversary of the Pueblo incident involving the North Korean takeover of a spy ship, a look back at hostage-taking over millennia and the repurposing of hostage-taking for propaganda.