All Lost In 1969 U21-A Mishap
We'll sing a song, a soldier's
song,
With cheering rousing chorus,
As round our blazing fires we throng,
The starry heavens o'er us;
Impatient for the coming fight,
And as we wait the morning's light,
Here in the silence of the night,
We'll chant a soldier's song.
The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO)
announced today that the remains of four US servicemen, missing in
action from the Vietnam War, have been identified and are being
returned to their families for burial.
They are:
- Lt. Col. Marvin L. Foster, Hubbard, TX
- Capt. David R.Smith, Dayton, OH
- Sgt. 1st Class Michael L. Batt, Defiance, OH
- Sgt. 1st Class Raymond E. Bobe, Tarrant, AL
All were US Army troops.
On March 16, 1969, Capt. Smith was piloting an Army U-21A "Ute"
aircraft with Foster, Batt, Bobe and one other passenger aboard
whose remains have not been identified. The aircraft left Qui Nhon
airfield in South Vietnam, headed for Phu Bai airport near Hue. The
Da Nang control tower briefly established radar and radio contact,
but was unable to maintain it. The aircraft never landed at the Phu
Bai airport.
Combat search and rescue units scoured the area, both land and
sea, for the next eight days, but did not find the missing
aircraft.
In 1988 and 1989, the Vietnamese government turned over to US
specialists several boxes of human remains, including
identification tags for Bobe and Smith. The technology at the time
failed to yield an identification of the remains. Also in 1989, a
Vietnamese refugee in the Philippines was interviewed, and turned
over human remains as well as a rubbing of an identification tag
for Bobe.
US specialists from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC)
conducted seven investigations between 1993 and 1999, to include
interviews with Vietnamese nationals who claimed to have knowledge
of the crash. Then in April and May of 2000, a JPAC team excavated
an area about 25 miles northwest of Da Nang, where they found
aircraft debris and human remains.
JPAC scientists and Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory
specialists used mitochondrial DNA as one of the forensic tools to
help identify the remains.
Of those Americans unaccounted for from all conflicts, 1,827 are
from the Vietnam War, with 1,393 of those within the country of
Vietnam. Another 756 Americans have been accounted for in Southeast
Asia since the end of the Vietnam War. Of the Americans identified,
528 are from within Vietnam.