Fallen Airmen laid to rest after 38 years
Release No. 06-07-10
June 18, 2010
Fallen Airmen laid to rest after 38 years
By Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael J. Carden
American Forces Press Service
ARLINGTON,
Va. (AFRNS) -- Unidentified remains of 14 fallen Air Force AC-130
gunship crewmembers were laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery
here June 17, nearly 40 years after their aircraft was shot down over
southern Laos.
Lt.
Col. Henry P. Brauner, Lt. Col. Richard Castillo, Lt. Col. Irving B.
Ramsower II, Lt. Col. Howard D. Stephenson, Maj. Curtis D. Miller, Maj.
Barclay B. Young, Capt. Richard C. Halpin, Capt. Charles J. Wanzel III,
Chief Master Sgt. Edwin J. Pearce, Senior Master Sgt. James K.
Caniford, Senior Master Sgt. Robert E. Simmons, Senior Master Sgt.
Edward D. Smith Jr., Master Sgt. Merlyn L. Paulson and Master Sgt.
William A. Todd were honored in a group burial with full military
honors in the cemetery's Section 60.
The crew was killed in action March 29, 1972, in the midst of the Vietnam War.
Air
Force Lt. Gen. Mark D. Shackelford presented an American flag to the
families. Air Force Chaplain (Capt.) Anthony Wade and Rev. Martin
McGill presided over the service.
Full
military honors included a flag-draped casket and carrying team, a
firing party, a band and bugler, a horse-drawn caisson and escorts from
the Air Force Honor Guard. All 14 names will be included on the
headstone.
Representatives
from the families of 13 of the Airmen attended the ceremony. Several
members of Rolling Thunder, an advocacy group for the return of all
prisoners of war and those missing in action, also attended the service.
Remains
for Captains Halpin and Wanzel, Chief Pearce, and Sergeants Caniford,
Simmons, Smith and Todd were positively identified and returned to
their families. Major Young and Sergeant Caniford were buried here
individually in 2008, said Kaitlin Horst, a spokeswoman for the
cemetery.
The
remaining seven airmen could not be identified, but are accounted for,
Larry Greer, a spokesman for the Pentagon's Joint Prisoners of War and
Missing in Action Accounting Command, said in an interview with
American Forces Press Service.
Forensic
anthropologists and scientists from the Defense Department are
confident all 14 Airmen were involved in the crash, Mr. Greer said.
The scientists used identification tools, circumstantial evidence and
DNA tests to match the crewmembers' remains with their families, Mr.
Greer said. Scientists also used dental comparisons to identify
remains.
"All
of these men have been accounted for, and the families have accepted
the identification," Mr. Greer said. "These final, full-honor services
are to recognize the sacrifices that these men made and their families
made, and all of us involved in this mission feel it an honor to bring
closure to these families."
The
crew's plane was shot down by a surface-to-air missile during an armed
reconnaissance mission. Search and rescue efforts were hindered
because of heavy enemy activity in the area and were stopped after only
a few days, Mr. Greer said.
The
first remains were recovered in 1986 by a joint U.S.-Laos team, Mr.
Greer said. Recovered items included two identification tags, life
support equipment and aircraft wreckage, he added.
Between
1986 and 1998, nine members of the aircrew were positively identified.
Follow-on surveys and excavations in 2005 and 2006 found more remains,
personal effects and other equipment, he said.
The
remains of more than 900 servicemembers killed in the Vietnam War have
been returned to their families since 1972. More than 1,700 remain
unaccounted-for.
In
the past year, the Joint Prisoners of War and Missing in Action
Accounting Command has accounted for 98 servicemembers missing from the
Korean War, Vietnam War and World War II. More than 80,000
servicemembers from the three wars remain unaccounted-for. Nearly
2,000 from the same wars have been accounted for and returned to their
families.
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