Fri, Jan 16, 2004
Mohawk Flightcrewman Missing from Vietnam War Identified
A serviceman missing in
action from the Vietnam War has been identified and returned to his
family for burial. He is Army Capt. Clinton A. Musil Sr. of
Minneapolis, Minn.
On May 31, 1971, Musil was aboard an OV-1A Mohawk flying a
daylight reconnaissance mission over Savannakhet Province in Laos.
Though enemy antiaircraft artillery was known to be in the area,
none of the crewmembers in other aircraft noted any attack on
Musil's aircraft.
Several people did see a large fireball when the Mohawk crashed.
Attempts to contact him by radio were unsuccessful, and search and
rescue efforts were precluded by enemy forces in the area.
During two investigations in 1993 and 1995, U.S. and Lao
specialists learned of a potential crash site from local residents.
The purported site was located on a steep slope, and appeared to
correlate within 200 meters with the loss location in U.S. wartime
records.
The site had been scavenged, but the team found small pieces of
aircraft wreckage and possible human remains. Following the
recommendations of the investigators, other U.S. and Lao teams
excavated the site twice in 2001 and once in 2002. During these
three excavations, they recovered aircraft wreckage, personal
effects, aircrew-related items and human remains.
The recovered remains were identified in 2003 by the Central
Identification Laboatory through skeletal analysis and
mitochondrial DNA. The remains of a second crew member have yet to
be identified. The Defense Department's POW/Missing Personnel
Office establishes policy and directs the effort to account for the
more than 88,000 missing in action from all conflicts. Of these,
1,871 are from the Vietnam War.
Welcome home Captain, your country is proud of you... rest
well.
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