McKENNEY, KENNETH DEWEY

Name: Kenneth Dewey McKenney
Rank/Branch: E3/US Air Force
Unit: 4th Air Commando Squadron, DaNang Airbase, South Vietnam
Date of Birth: 03 April 1945
Home City of Record: Auburn MA
Date of Loss: 15 May 1966
Country of Loss: Laos
Loss Coordinates: 165800N 1060400E
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: AC47
Other Personnel In Incident: William L. Madison; George W. Jensen; James A.
Preston; Lavern G. Reilly; Marshall L. Tapp; George W. Thompson; James E.
Williams (all missing)

REMARKS: NO RAD CNTCT - POS DED FBIS - J

SYNOPSIS: Maj. George W. Jensen was the pilot of an AC47 aircraft which
departed Ubon Air Base, Thailand on an armed visual reconnaissance mission over
Laos on May 15, 1966. His crew that day consisted of Maj. Lavern G. Reilly,
spare pilot; Capt. Marshall L. Tapp, co-pilot; 1Lt. George W. Thompson,
navigator; SSgt. James A. Preston, load master; Sgt. James E. Williams, flight
engineer; Airman 1st Class Kenneth D. McKenney and Sgt. William L. Madison,
gunners.

At 1745 hours, Jensen radioed his position, and again at 2100 hours, Jensen
radioed situation normal, with no position given, nor was the target area
specified. The aircraft's last location was over the Laotian panhandle about 15
miles due east of the city of Ban Muong Sen in Savannakhet Province.

When the aircraft failed to return to the base as scheduled, an aerial search
was conducted during the daylight hours of May 16, with negative results. The
aircraft was not found, and no evidence of the crew surfaced. 

The crew of the AC47 is among nearly 600 Americans lost in Laos during the war
with Vietnam. Although the numbers of men actually termed "prisoner of war" are
quite low, this can be explained in understanding the blanket of security
surrounding the "secret war" the U.S. waged in Laos. To protect the public
perception that we "were not in Laos", details of many loss incidents were
"rearranged" to show a loss or casualty in South Vietnam. Only a handful of
publicly exposed cases were ever acknowledged POW, even though scores of pilots
and ground personnel were known to have been alive and well at last contact
(thus increasing the chance they were captured alive).

The Lao communist faction, the Pathet Lao, stated on several occasions that
they held "tens of tens" of American prisoners, but the Pathet Lao were not
included in the Paris Peace agreements ending American involvement in the war.
As a consequence, no American POWs held in Laos were negotiated for. Not one
American held in Laos has ever been released. As thousands of reports continue
to flow in regarding Americans still captive in Southeast Asia, the fates of
the crew of the AC47 become more intriguing. It is entirely possible, with no
evidence to the contrary, that they survived to be captured. Whether they
survived or not, they were abandoned to the enemy.

Prepared by Homecoming II Project 01 December 1989

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