In Honor of

1st Lt. Mark Allen Peterson
Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force
Unit: 23rd Tactical Airlift Squadron, NKP TH
Date of Birth: 14 May 1949
Home City of Record: Canton OH
Date of Loss: 27 January 1973
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 165145N 1071107E (YD328655)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action (If I'm reading a search of gov't records on internet, his status has since been changed to Killed in Action, in the Quang Tri Province. He is listed on the Virtual Wall site as "not yet memorialized" and so his name is missing from the Wall. Click here to read why our men were declared KIA. Then use your browser's back key to return here. --Celia)Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: OV10A
Refno: 1981Other Personnel In Incident: Capt. George W. Morris Jr.
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 March 1991 from 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.
Remarks: GOOD CHUTE; POSS VOICE CONTACT
SYNOPSIS: The OV10 Bronco was among the aircraft most feared by the Viet Cong and NVA forces. Whenever the Bronco appeared overhead, an air strike was certain to follow. Although the glassed-in cabin could become uncomfortably warm, it provided splendid visibility. The two-man crew had armor protection and could use machine guns and bombs to attack, as well as rockets to mark targets for fighter bombers. This versatility enabled the plane to fly armed reconnaissance missions, in addition to serving as vehicle for forward air controllers.
1Lt. Mark A. Peterson was pilot, and Capt. George W. Morris the co-pilot, of an OV10A aircraft with the mission of locating two downed Navy pilots on January 27, 1973 within hours of the signing of the Paris Peace Accords ending American military involvement in Vietnam.
When the aircraft was over Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam, it was hit by enemy fire and both Peterson and Morris were forced to eject. Both safely parachuted to the ground and one was in radio contact with rescuers. However, neither could be located or rescued, apparently because of the enemy situation.
It is not known for certain that Morris and Peterson were captured. The two Navy pilots they were trying to rescue were Phillip A Kientzler and Harley H. Hall. Kientzler was captured and released a few months later in the general prisoner release. Kientzler was told Hall had been killed. It is
believed that the Vietnamese could easily account for Peterson and Morris, alive or dead.Nearly 2500 Americans were lost in Southeast Asia during our military
involvement there. Since the war in Southeast Asia ended in 1973, thousands of reports relating to Americans prisoner, missing or unaccounted for have been received by the U.S. Government. The official policy is that no conclusive proof has been obtained that is current enough to act upon. Detractors of this policy say conclusive proof is in hand, but that the willingness or ability to rescue these prisoners does not exist.Peterson and Morris, if among those hundreds said to be still alive and in
captivity, must be wondering if and when his country will return for him. In America, we say that life is precious, but isn't the life of even one American worth the effort of recovery? When the next war comes, and it is our sons lost, will we then care enough to do everything we can to bring our prisoners home?
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[r1981.97]
PROJECT X
SUMMARY SELECTION RATIONALENAMES: MORRIS George W. Jr., Capt. USAF
PETERSON, Mark A., 1LT, USAF
OFFICIAL STATUS: MORRIS - MISSING
PETERSON - MISSING
CASE SUMMARY: SEE ATTACHED
RATIONALE FOR SELECTION: Both crewmen ejected and were observed to land near each other. After a brief period Lt. Peterson stated that be was going to be captured. There are indications that one of the two crewmen (probably Capt. Morris), was killed in the incident.
REFNO: 1981 21 Apr. 76
(C) CASE SUMMARY
1. (U) At 1735 hours on 27 January 1973 lLt Mark A. Peterson, pilot, and Capt. George W. Morris, Jr., co-pilot, were crewmen of an OV10 aircraft, (#68-3806, call sign NAIL 89), controlling a search and rescue mission for the crewmen of an F4 aircraft which had been downed at 1715 hours near the Cua Viet River in South Vietnam. Crewmen of the other aircraft in the area saw the Peterson-Morris aircraft hit by an SA-7 missile and observed both officers eject. They saw two good parachutes, which landed near each other, and heard two good beeper signals. After a brief period they heard Lt. Peterson state: "This is NAIL 89'er. I'm going to be captured.! I'm going to be captured!" He was asked to repeat this transmission and did so. There was no further contact with him and contact was never established with Capt. Morris. The last known location was in the vicinity of grid coordinates YD 328 655. (Ref 1)
2. (C) One member of the F4 crew was captured. He was released during Operation Homecoming and reported he saw the OV10 hit and the crewmen eject. As they were coming down in their parachutes, an estimated 30 North Vietnamese troops opened fire on them with AK-47 rifle fire. He believed they were both killed. Also, the North Vietnamese in Hanoi made a great production of him being the last US POW of the war. (Ref 2)
3. (U) A South Vietnamese source reported that on 30 January 1973 he
observed an OV10 plane shot down. He later observed a US P0W being escorted by five North Vietnamese personnel. He heard this POW was to be taken to the Trieu Phong District Unit and that a second US pilot was killed in action at the crash site. (Ref 3)4. (C) A North Vietnamese source reported hearing from a local guerrilla
member of the Go Hai Village Unit that an OV10 aircraft had been shot down by a single missile (type unknown) of an anti-aircraft unit in the Cua Viet area. The US pilot ejected but his parachute did not open and he was killed instantly on impact in a ricefield. In the meantime, the plane crashed about two kilometers southeast of the site where the pilot landed. The source did not visit the site and could not provide a description of the
pilot's remains. (Ref 4)5. (C) A South Vietnamese soldier who escaped from Communist detention reported observing an OV10 hit by anti-aircraft ground fire about three kilometers from his location. The pilots ejected from the aircraft. The wind blew both parachutes in a northeast direction. A little later a group of five guerrillas escorted a US POW to the source's location. An escort told the source the POW was being taken to the security section of the Trieu Phong District Unit. A few days after this incident the source heard from a friend that one of the OV10 pilots had been killed and buried in the center of a ricefield. (Ref 5)
6. (U) During the existence of JCRC, the hostile threat in the area
precluded any visits to or ground inspections of the sites involved in this
case. These individuals' names and identifying data were turned over to the Four-Party Joint Military Team with a request for any information
available. No response was forthcoming. Capt. Morris and lLt Peterson are carried in the status of Missing.REFERENCES USED
1. RPT (FOUO), 56CSG, AF Form 484 w/statements, Feb 73.
2. MSG (C) 13AF JHPC 27190OZ Mar 73.
3. RPT (U), USDAO IIR 6 918 5878 74.7 11 May 74.
4. RPT (C), USDAO IIR 6 918 6811 74 28 -Aug 74.
5. RPT (C), USDAO IIR 6 91-8 6'055 74, 9 Aug 74.
ASSOCIATED INDIVIDUALS
1. George W. MORRIS Jr. 1981-1-01
2. Mark A. Peterson 1981-1-02
* National Alliance of Families Home Page
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5 Sep 2001