Name: Don Charles Wood
Rank/Branch: O3/US Air Force
Unit: 354th Tactical Fighter Squadron, Takhli AB, Thailand
Date of Birth: 11 November 1929
Home City of Record: Provo UT
Date of Loss: 16 January 1966
Country of Loss: Laos
Loss Coordinates: 193210N 1030825E (TG959751)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: F105D 59-1719
Refno: 0233
Blodd Chit # 330095
Call sign: Olds 5
Other Personnel In Incident: (none missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 April 1990
with the assistance
of one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government
agency
sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published
sources,
interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK 1998 with information
from Bob
Jacobs and the Library of Congress.
REMARKS: POSS CAPT - ID IN PL FILM
SYNOPSIS: The Plain of Jars region of Laos was long been
controlled by the
communist Pathet Lao and a continual effort was made
by the secret
CIA-directed force of some 30,000 indigenous tribesmen
to strengthen anti-
communist strongholds there. The U.S. committed hundreds
of millions of
dollars to the war effort in Laos. Details of this secret
operation were not
released until August 1971.
A flight of five F105s departed TAKHLI RTAFB at 1516
hours on 16 January 1966.
Their target was automated AAA gun positions in the Plain
of Jars, Laos. Don
C. Wood's RF105D fighter aircraft was flying as the number
five aircraft
equipped with two, 70mm camera pods. His mission was
to photograph the damage
inflicted by the strike for damage assessment. He followed
every run in, not
necessarily in formation to get photos. They made 1 bomb
run, 1 rocket run and
2 strafe passes. During the third strafe pass #4 thought
his gun blew up. At
the same time #1 called and asked who headed north and
did a 360 degree roll.
Lead had seen an F105 cross about 5000 feet in front
of him on a northerly
heading in a 20 degree climb. That was Don Wood's RF105D.
Confusion ensued as
#3 checked #4 for damage. Radio contact could not be
established with Olds 5
on the tactical channel or on guard channel. Olds 5 was
not seen to crash; but
was believed to have crashed 8 to 15 miles north of the
target. Olds 1 and 2
searched the area north and east for wreckage while #3
and #4 refueled by air
tanker. Then Olds 3 and 4 took up the search until dark.
All four F105s had to
land at Udorn due to minimum fuel. Records indicate he
was downed by AAA. He
did not return to friendly control, and was declared
Missing in Action.
Captain Wood was the first USAF loss of 1966. His wife
and six children were
told that there was the possibility that he had been
taken prisoner as he had
been identified from a Pathet Lao film of American prisoners
of war.
Wood is among nearly 600 Americans who were lost in Laos.
Because Laos was
"neutral", and because the U.S. continued to state they
were not at war with
Laos (although we were regularly bombing North Vietnamese
traffic along the
border and conducted assaults against communist strongholds
thoughout the
country at the behest of the anti-communist government
of Laos), and did not
recognize the Pathet Lao as a government entity, the
nearly 600 Americans
lost in Laos were never recovered.
The Pathet Lao stated that they held and would release
the "tens of tens" of
American prisoners they held only from Laos. At war's
end, no American held
in Laos was released - or negotiated for.
Alarmingly, evidence continues to mount that Americans
were left as
priosoners in Southeast Asia and continue to be held
today. Unlike "MIAs"
from other wars, most of the nearly 2500 men and women
who remain missing in
Southeast Asia can be accounted for. If even one was
left alive (and many
authorities estimate the numbers to be in the hundreds),
we have failed as a
nation until and unless we do everything possible to
secure his freedom.
-------------------------------------------------
[ssrep7.txt 02/09/93]
SMITH 324 COMPELLING CASES
Laos
Don C. Wood
(0233)
On January 16, 1966, Captain Wood was one of a flight
of five F-105
aircraft on a mission over Xieng Khouang Province, Laos.
Captain
wood was the pilot of an F-105D on a photo reconnaissance
mission.
While over the target and with flight members receiving
37mm
antiaircraft fire on their passes over the target, Captain
Wood's
flight leader determined Captain Wood was not present
with the
remainder of the flight. The flight members searched
a thirty mile
radius from their target and were unable to locate either
him or
his crash site. Searches for him continued for
the next three
months and were unsuccessful. He was initially
declared missing in
action.
On January 18, 1966, Radio Beijing announced that a U.S.
aircraft
was shot down over Laos on January 16, 1966. A
Pathet Lao radio
broadcast also mentioned the shoot down of an aircraft
and reported
an airmen was seen parachuting down.
A Pathet Lao source interrogated in Laos in 1974 described
the
recovery of a U.S. airman who fell from an aircraft hit
by
antiaircraft fire from the area from the area of the
Pathet Lao
Regional Headquarters at Phou Kout. The airman
reportedly died
shortly after capture. This incident was placed
in Captain Wood's
file as possibly correlating to him due to the loss location.
A
Lao propaganda film obtained in January 1977 showed the
identity
card of Captain Wood together with blood chits, revolvers,
helmets
and other items which appeared undamaged.
In March 1980, Captain Wood was declared dead/body not
recovered.
His remains have not been repatriated. He was never
reported by
returning U.S. POWs to be alive in the Lao or Vietnamese
prison
system.
-------------------------------------------
[324.txt 12/29/92]
Bob Smith
New Hampshire
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
U.S. POW/MIAs WHO MAY HAVE SURVIVED IN CAPTIVITY
Prepared by the Office of Senator Bob Smith
Vice-Chairman, Senate
Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs
December 1, 1992
Wood, Don C.
USAF -Laos, identified in Pathet Lao
film, possibly captured. (DIA,
1979)
-believed to have successfully
got out of his aircraft and was
alive on the ground. Last known
alive (DoD April 1991 list)
------------------------------------
Records from the Library of Congress reveal the following
details:
Radio Lao Kingdom reported the "capture of on US POW
on the evening of 16
JAN 66 at 2100 hours.
20 JAN 66 Radio Peking announced an aircraft shot down
and the capture of
the pilot in Phou Ken Khout area on Jan 16 by the Pathet
Lao.
The initial telegram said "missing over hostile territory
in SVN."
A follow-up letter on 19 JAN 66 defined a bombing mission,
with him missing
"in Southeast Asia." The note is signed by Col. William
H. Nelson, destined
to become another POW/MIA of the Vietnam War on July
20, 1966.
On March 16th, parents advised "There is a possible indication
that Don may
be all right." The note is signed by the 354th TFS Commander.
The 355 TFW, Thailand (Wood's wing) contacted HQ 7th
AF at Tan Son Nhut,
requesting info on Don, seems 355th refers to him as
WIA and wants to know
his status --- date appears to be 04 MAY 66.
The family learns Don was downed over Laos.
26 JUL 68 "Mr and Mrs Wood have studied Photo #
25, as have several
disinterested persons to include a local military photo
interpreter, all of
whom have seen a very positive resemblance. Particularly
the hairline, nose
and cheek profile, neck and shape of head."
17 FEB 77 Don Woods ID card clearly identifiable in
one of 20 propaganda
films which came out of Laos. Soundtracks were
in Lao.
01 NOV 79 CIA Info officer, Robert E Owen, denies Mrs
Wood's request for CIA
docs.
23 USAF Cols assigned to final review board by a 2 star
USAF
Mrs Wood objected to the hearing and expressed the opinion,
"all status
review hearings were a travesty of justice because they
have all reached the
same outcome."
Deborah Wood (daughter) objected, expressing " that the
hearing was to
proceed without the US Government having made efforts
to determine from the
Laotian Government how they came to possess Col. Wood's
ID card."
TTY 14 MAR 80 to various USAF bases and Terminating MIA
status to KIA.
Presumptive date 03 MAR 80.
A July 1987 DIA evaluation concludes "...it is highly
likely that the Lao
refugee xxxxx observed USAF Capt. Don C. Wood...."
28 MAR 90 Report by analyst (name expunged) no agency
affilition revealed.
Radio Lao broadcast a reported downing and capture on
16 Jan 66 near Phou
Khout.
2 Pathet Lao defector reports of an F105 downed, pilot
ejected but no chute.
One says downed near Phou Keng. Pilot a captain, buried
in cemetery just off
rte 7, north of Khang Khay. Other PL said was still alive
but died shortly
-- buried north of Khang Khay.
Quote the analyst: "... believe Capt Wood's aircraft
was hit by AAA near
Phou Khout, forcing him to eject. After ejecting,
his paracute either
suffered a total malfunction or streamered. Capt
Wood may have initially
survived the jump, but probably died shortly after ...
Capt Wood was
probably buried in the cemetery just north of Khang Khay..."
24 APR 90 from DIA Wash DC -- one recipient was US Embassy
Vientiene. Same
PL reports, mention of film with ID card. adds in 1985
a source claimed to
have seen an American in captivity near BAN XEIN in Jan
66. "Description
similar to Wood" Report comes to same conclusion
as the previous analysist
-- word for word. Recommends DIA take action to
confirm existence of KHANG
KHAI Cemetery Then propose to Lao government a
small team gravesite
excavation. This was transmitted SECURE.
A single page - no date -- refers to films. "These
films provide prima
facie evidence that the Lao possess information concerning
US personnel
unaccounted for in Laos."
INTEL Report - no date or source, signed by Lewis R. Cardwell
-- no title or
rank.
"The report also states that an American Pilot was at
the headquarters in
Ban Nakay Noun about 16 JAN 66 as a captive of the North
Vietnamese and
being taken to North Vietnam. The informer heard
that this pilot was the
pilot of the plane they had been searching for from 11-16
JAN 66. He was
described as being tall, light complexioned and had brown
hair" He
comments: description resembles Wood's med records 6'
2", brown hair. "...
it is possible that the captured pilot observed was Captain
Wood on his way
to North Vietnam."
An analyst notes discrepencies in last known location
for some air losses.
Because of lack of observation, the last known location
is on the runway,
before takeoff roll! [does not appear to apply
to Wood] Appears to have
handwritten "genius" at end.
Have a page seems to be an address header for a message
from USDAO LAOS, date
appears to be 07 NOV 74. Many recipients, of note AIR
INTEL GROUP, FT
BELVOIR, DIR NSA FT Meade MD, CIA.
Much of this material has COL DON C. WOOD, [expunged],
MIA. There is
something about his title or skills that is still sanitized.
profile from POWMIA NETWORK
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