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lrd
28 May 2003, 07:11
MISSING NAVY CREWMEMBERS FOUND AND IDENTIFIED

The remains of nine U.S. Navy crewmembers, missing in action from the Vietnam War, have been identified and their remains are being returned to their families for burial.

The nine are identified as Cmdr. Delbert A. Olson, Casselton, N.D.; Lt. j.g.'s Denis L. Anderson, Hope, Kan.; Arthur C. Buck, Sandusky, Ohio; and Philip P. Stevens, Twin Lake, Mich.; Petty Officers 2nd class Richard M. Mancini, Amsterdam, N.Y.; Michael L. Roberts, Purvis, Miss., Donald N. Thoresen and Kenneth H. Widon, Detroit and Petty Officer 3rd class Gale R. Siow, Huntington Park, Calif.

A group burial will be held at Arlington National Cemetery on June 18, 2003.

The nine departed Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base on Jan.11, 1968 onboard a Navy OP-2E Neptune aircraft for a mission over Laos to drop sensors which detected enemy movements. During its last radio contact, the crew reported they were descending through dense clouds. When they did not return to their home base, a search was initiated but found no evidence of a crash. Two weeks later, an Air Force aircrew photographed what appeared to be the crash site, but enemy activity in the area prevented a recovery operation.

Between 1993 and 2002, six U.S.-Lao investigation teams led by the Joint Task Force Full Accounting interviewed villagers in the surrounding area, gathered aircraft debris and surveyed the purported crash site scattered on two ledges of Phou Louang Mountain in Khammouan Province. During a 1996 visit, team members also recovered identification cards for several crewmembers, as well as human remains.

Full-scale recovery missions by the U.S. Army Central Identification Laboratory Hawaii (CILHI) in both 2001 and 2002 yielded additional remains, as well as identification of other crewmembers. More than 1,900 Americans are missing in action from the Vietnam War, with another 86,000 MIA from the Cold War, the Korean War and WWII.

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2003/b05272003_bt370-03.html

XXNavy
28 May 2003, 07:57
Welcome home...

j5irons
28 May 2003, 07:59
RIP

Welcome home.

Justin

lrd
7 July 2003, 11:28
http://www.naswi.navy.mil/crosswind/7-4-03/images/A%20NAVY%20OP-2E.jpg
THIS NAVY OP-2E reconnaissance aircraft is flown by Crew 3 of VO-67 during the Vietnam War.

It's been a long time coming
By Greg Fischer
Crosswind Staff

Peace of mind has finally come to the families and friends of nine Servicemen whose modified P2V aircraft crashed 35 years ago during the Vietnam War.

Crew 2 of VO-67 was flying a classified mission from their home base at Nakhon Phanom, Thailand, dropping sensors and listening devices along the Ho Chi Min Trail, when they crashed into the Laotian mountainside. The nine crewmembers were initially classified as missing in action, but changed to killed in action only three or four days later.

Ed Witt of NAS Whidbey Island's Supply Department was a plane captain (equivalent to today's Flight Engineer) with another crew of VO-67 during the same period.

"These missions were very hazardous," said Witt. "We had to fly low and slow, about 500 feet at 250 knots."

Repatriation has been a slow process as recovery procedures can only be carried out during a three-month period each year. The recovery process is part of the Joint Task Force Full Accounting Mission (JTFFA).

Recovery of the remains did not begin until 1996 and was completed January through March 2002 while two Sailors from AIMD Whidbey, PR1(AW) Nicholas Williams and PR1(AW) Benjamin Umayan, were temporarily assigned to JTFFA and worked at the Crew 2 recovery site. Umayan said, "It was surreal working on a dig where a crew crashed so long ago. I feel it was the high point in my six and a half year career so far, being able to help repatriate the crew with their families."

Finally this year, full identification was complete for the ill-fated crew and remains were returned to their families.

A group ceremony was held on June 19 at Arlington National Cemetery where six of the nine were buried and a monument for the entire crew displayed. Witt and 25 others from VO-67 attended the ceremony along with their families and friends. In all, over 150 turned out to pay their last respects to a crew that perished over a quarter century ago.

"It was a very emotional ceremony and well put together," Witt continued. "It was gratifying to finally get these guys home and in the ground."

Robert Siow was only 4 years old when his father, Gale Siow, left for his tour in Vietnam. He recalled riding on his dad's shoulders the day he left and not knowing why he was going, or when he would be back. When the ceremony was over, he turned and saluted his father's casket.

Two complete crews were lost from VO-67, totaling 20 brave men from three downed aircraft. Today, Capt. Paul Milius still remains unaccounted for. He was the aircraft commander of Crew 7 and the last to bail out of his burning aircraft in February 1968, allowing the remaining seven survivors to be rescued.

Milius was initially in radio contact with rescue helos on the day of the crash. The next day, only his radio beacon was heard and the rescue mission had to be aborted due to heavy enemy gunfire. His status was changed to presumed killed in action 10 years after the crash.

Now there's a U.S. Navy ship named after this brave pilot, USS Milius (DDG-69) in San Diego, Calif. The ship's website opens with, "The USS Milius is the 19th and best of the Navy's new class of Arleigh Burke Guided Missile Destroyers. The ship is named for the late Captain Paul L. Milius, an OP-2E reconnaissance pilot who was shot down during Vietnam. She was commissioned into the fleet on Nov. 23, 1996."

As you finish reading this article, please pause for a moment out of respect for Crew 2 of VO-67, Denis Anderson, Arthur Buck, Richard Mancini, Delbert Olson, Michael Roberts, Gale Siow, Philip Stevens, Donald Thoresen and Kenneth Widon and all the other brave souls who gave their lives in the name of freedom.

http://www.naswi.navy.mil/crosswind/

CPTAUSRET
7 July 2003, 11:36
Originally posted by lrd
MISSING NAVY CREWMEMBERS FOUND AND IDENTIFIED

A group burial will be held at Arlington National Cemetery on June 18, 2003.

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2003/b05272003_bt370-03.html

Welcome home:

Rest in Peace:

Terry

EarthPig
7 July 2003, 12:54
Welcome home, Brothers.
RLTW
EP