KRYSZAK, THEODORE EUGENE Remains returned 06/20/95, ID 04/28/03
Name: Theodore Eugene Kryszak Rank/Branch: O3/US Air Force Unit: 4th Air Commando Squadron, Ubon AF TH Date of Birth: 23 September 1932 Home City of Record: Buffalo NY Date of Loss: 03 June 1966 Country of Loss: Laos Loss Coordinates: 170400N 1055900E (XD054858) Status (in 1973): Missing in Action Category: 2 Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: AC47 Refno: 0354
Other Personnel in Incident: Russell D. Martin; Harold E. Mullins; Luther L. Rose; Harding E. Smith; Ervin Warren (all 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 2005.
REMARKS: WRECKAGE SITED - NO TRACE OF CREW
SYNOPSIS: Capt. Theodore E. Kryszak was the pilot of an AC47 gunship assigned to the 4th Air Commando Squadron at Ubon Airfield, Thailand. The aircraft, dubbed "Puff the Magic Dragon" had evolved from earlier versions of the Douglas C47.
Puff introduced a new principle to air attack in Vietnam. Troubled by difficulties in conducting nighttime defense, Capt. Ronald Terry of the U.S. Air Force Aeronautical Systems Division remembered reading about flying missionaries in Latin America who lowered baskets of supplies on a rope from a tightly circling airplane. Throughout the series of pylon turns, the basket remained suspended over a selected point on the ground. Could this principle be applied to fire from automatic weapons? Tests proved it could, and could be extremely successful.
Puff's "flare kicker" illuminated the target, then the pilot used a mark on the window to his left as a gun sight and circled slowly as three multibarrel 7-62mm machine guns fired 18,000 rounds per minute from the door and two windows in the port side of the passenger compartment. The aircraft was called "Puff" after a popular song of the day, and because it resembled a dragon overhead with flames billowing from its guns. Men on the ground welcomed the presence of Puff and the later Spooky version, which was essentially the same as the Puff, because of its ability to concentrate a heavy dose of defensive fire in a surgically determined area.
Capt. Kryszak's Puff was assigned a mission which took it over Khammouane Province, Laos on June 3, 1966. His crew that day included 1Lt. Russell D. Martin; Col. Harding E. Smith; TSgt. Harold E. Mullins; TSgt. Luther L. Rose; and SSgt. Ervin Warren. On such a crew, it was common for the officers to be the flight crew, while the sergeants acted as aerial gunners. On this crew, Mullins was the flight engineer.
At a point about 10 miles east of Ban Pha Philang near the borders of Savannakhet and Khammouane Provinces, Capt. Kryszak's aircraft was shot down. The Puff was seen to crash by another aircraft in the area. No parachutes were seen and no emergency radio beeper signals were heard, yet at least one of the men onboard the aircraft was known to have survived. (Col. Harding E. Smith, according to a list compiled by the National League of Families of POW/MIA in Southeast Asia survived this incident.)
According to the Air Force, subsequent searches for the aircraft revealed the wreckage of the aircraft, but the crew could not be located. All personnel aboard were declared Missing in Action.
The crew of the Puff lost on June 3, 1966 are among nearly 600 Americans lost in Laos during the Vietnam War. Even though the Pathet Lao stated publicly that they held "tens of tens" of American prisoners, not one American held in Laos was ever released -- or negotiated for.
Since American involvement in the war in Southeast Asia ended, nearly 10,000 reports have been received by the U.S. Government relating to Americans missing in Southeast Asia. Many authorities have reluctantly concluded that there are hundreds left alive in captivity today.
When the United States left Southeast Asia, what was termed "peace with honor" was in reality an abandonment -- of the freedom-loving peoples of Vietnam and Laos, and of America's best men. It's time we brought our men home.
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http://www.wgrz.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=24156
Military Confirms Local Airman Killed In Vietnam In '66; Brother Not So Sure
Posted by: Aaron Saykin, Reporter Created: 11/8/2004 11:49:06 PM Robert Kryszak of Angola has a thick binder full of evidence. Written on the pages inside is the military's final word on what happened to his brother nearly four decades ago.
The military's word, he says, but not his.
"Is my brother in that grave? You haven't proven it to me pal," Kryszak said.
The grave he mentioned is at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C. Last Friday, the military buried what are thought to be the collective remains of Robert's brother, Ted Kryszak, and five other men, who crashed during a dangerous mission in June of 1966.
The mission was so perilous that Ted made an ominous prediction to Robert before he left.
"He said, 'You know I'm not coming back,'" Robert recalled. "I asked, 'Wadda you mean?' He says, 'I fly too slow, too low and they gotta get me.'"
Witnesses saw Ted's plane on fire, and no parachutes. It would be another 30 years until the crash site was found.
Searchers at the site dug up one of Ted's dog tags along with his captain bars. But the military could only verify the remains of one crewmember, not Ted.
"All of this modern technology and they can't prove part of him was there?" Kryszak wondered.
Yet last week the military concluded the entire crew died during the crash. The funeral went forward, but Robert was unwilling to accept his older brother was gone until he's absolutely certain.
"It's closed," he said, adding "But down here (in my heart), I don't think so."
Robert was not able to attend the funeral for his brother, Ted. He said the military gave him only two days notice. But had he been certain Ted's remains were among those recovered, he said he would have walked all the way to Arlington.