POOLE, CHARLIE SHERMAN Remains Identified. Oct 2003 - see story below. Internment service held at Arlington December 19, 2003.
Name: Charlie Sherman Poole Rank/Branch: E6/US Air Force, gunner Unit: 307th Strat Wing, Utapao AB TH Date of Birth: 07 June 1932 Home City of Record: Gibsland LA Date of Loss: 19 December 1972 Country of Loss: North Vietnam Loss Coordinates: 205900N 1054359E (WJ762203) Status (in 1973): Missing In Action Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: B52D
Others In Incident: Richard W. Cooper (missing); Henry C. Barrows; Hal K. Wilson; Fernando Alexander; Charles A. Brown, Jr. (all POWs released in 1973).
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 April 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 2003.
REMARKS: POSS DEAD/LAO DONG
SYNOPSIS: Frustrated by problems in negotiating a peace settlement, and pressured by a Congress and public wanting an immediate end to American involvement in Vietnam, President Nixon ordered the most concentrated air offensive of the war - known as Linebacker II - in December 1972. During the offensive, sometimes called the "Christmas bombings," 40,000 tons of bombs were dropped, primarily over the area between Hanoi and Haiphong. White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said that the bombing would end only when all U.S. POWs were released and an internationally recognized cease-fire was in force.
On the first day of Linebacker II, December 18, 129 B52s arrived over Hanoi in three waves, four to five hours apart. They attacked the airfields at Hoa Lac, Kep and Phuc Yen, the Kinh No complex and the Yen Vien railyards. The aircraft flew in tight cells of three aircraft to maximize the mutual support benefits of their ECM equipment and flew straight and level to stabilize the bombing computers and ensure that all bombs fell on the military targets and not in civilian areas.
The pilots of the early missions reported that "wall-to-wall SAMS" surrounded Hanoi as they neared its outskirts. The first night of bombing, December 18 and 19, two B52s were shot down by SAMs.
Onboard the first aircraft shot down on December 18 was its pilot, LTCOL Donald L. Rissi and crewmen MAJ Richard E. Johnson, CAPT Richard T. Simpson, CAPT Robert G. Certain, 1LT Robert J. Thomas and SGT Walter L. Ferguson. Of this crew, Certain, Simpson and Johnson were captured and shown the bodies of the other crew members. Six years later, the bodies of Rissi, Thomas and Ferguson were returned to U.S. control by the Vietnamese. Certain, Simpson and Johnson were held prisoner in Hanoi until March 29, 1973, when they were released in Operation Homecoming.
Capt. Hal K. Wilson was in the lead aircraft of a B52 cell from Utapao. Also on board his aircraft were crew men MAJ Fernando Alexander, CAPT Charles A. Brown, Jr., CAPT Henry C. Barrows, CAPT Richard W. Cooper Jr. (the navigator), and SGT Charlie S. Poole (the tailgunner). Wilson's aircraft was hit by a SAM near his target area and crashed in the early morning hours of December 19, sustaining damage to the fuselage. In the ensuing fire, there was no time for orderly bailout, but as later examination of radio tapes indicated, all six crewmen deployed their parachutes and evidently safely ejected. The aircraft damage report indicated that all six men were prisoner.
Radio Hanoi announced in news broadcasts between 19 and 22 December that the six crewmen had been captured. When the war ended, however, only four of the crew returned from Hanoi prisons. Hanoi has remained silent about the fate of Charlie Poole and Richard Cooper.
The Christmas Bombings, despite press accounts to the contrary, were of the most precise the world had seen. Pilots involved in the immense series of strikes generally agree that the strikes against anti-aircraft and strategic targets was so successful that the U.S., had it desired, "could have taken the entire country of Vietnam by inserting an average Boy Scout troop in Hanoi and marching them southward."
To achieve this precision bombing, the Pentagon deemed it necessary to stick to a regular flight path. For many missions, the predictable B52 strikes were anticipated and prepared for by the North Vietnamese. Later, however, flight paths were altered and attrition all but eliminated any hostile threat from the ground.
Linebacker II involved 155 Boeing B52 Stratofortress bombers stationed at Anderson AFB, Guam (72nd Strat Wing) and another 50 B52s stationed at Utapao Airbase, Thailand (307th Strat Wing), an enormous number of bombers with over one thousand men flying the missions. However, the bombings were not conducted without high loss of aircraft and personnel. During the month of December 1972, 61 crewmembers onboard ten B52 aircraft were shot down and were captured or declared missing. (The B52 carried a crew of six men; however, one B52 lost carried an extra crewman.) Of these 61, 33 men were released in 1973. The others remained missing at the end of the war. Over half of these survived to eject safely. What happened to them?
Reports mount that have convinced many authorities that Americans are still held captive in Southeast Asia. Are Poole and Cooper among them? Do they know the country they love has abandoned them? Isn't it time we found them and brought them home?
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The New Orleans Times-Picayune Sunday, March 12, 2000
FAMILY WAITS TO LAY PILOT DAD TO REST VIETNAM WAR NOT OVER UNTIL BODY COMES HOME James Minton The Advocate
Ruth Poole has vivid memories of the day she learned her father's plane had been shot down during a bombing mission over the North Vietnamese capital of Hanoi.
"It was hard to believe," said Poole, who was then nearing her 15th birthday.
After 27 years, the war still intrudes into her life as she struggles with resolving the loss of her father, whose body has been recovered but not released for burial.
In December 1972, President Nixon ordered an all-out bombing campaign against North Vietnam to push the North Vietnamese back to the peace talks, which had stalled in Paris.
Called Operation Linebacker II, the campaign included the first use of Air Force B-52 bombers over North Vietnam, including the plane "Rose 01" for which Tech. Sgt. Charlie Poole of Gibsland was the tail gunner.
Based at Westover Air Force Base, Mass., his plane was operating that month from U-Tapao Air Base, Thailand, and went on a mission on Dec. 18, the first night of Linebacker II.
*** No ordinary day ***
"My Mom took us to school that morning as usual. We knew a B-52 (from Westover) had been shot down during the night, but we didn't know which one," she recalled.
As she and her sister neared their duplex apartment after school, they noticed an unusual number of cars parked outside.
"I said I hoped it wasn't at our house, but when we got closer I could see all the uniforms inside and I knew it was Dad's plane. It was quite upsetting," she said.
Before the bombing halted on Dec. 29, many other families at Westover received grim news from the war zone.
"Every day, they came and got someone out of class. They lost a lot of B-52s from Westover," she said.
Although the Pentagon never classified Charlie Poole as a prisoner of war, four members of the crew bailed out after the plane was hit by two surface-to-air missiles. Poole and the sixth crewman, Capt. Richard Cooper, were unable to eject.
*** Unending battle ***
Hanoi thought it had captured an entire B-52 crew, which it paraded through the streets. A local newspaper listed Charlie Poole as a POW, giving the family a glimmer of hope, she said.
Those hopes were dashed as Americans made plans to welcome the former POWs home.
"I remember when Mom got the call that Dad's name was not on the list and wouldn't be released.
"I guess the whole thing was that the war wasn't over for us. When he wasn't on the list, it was quite silent in our home for a long time," she said.
Charlie Poole's status remained as "missing in action" until June 8, 1979, when the Defense Department declared him dead.
Not long after Rose 01 went down, the Poole family moved back to Bossier City, where her mother, who met her husband when she was in the Army Medical Corps in Denver, became active in the state chapter of a national organization for families of missing troops.
Ruth Poole, now manager of Albertson's in Baker, also became active in the organization, a role that has taken her to the White House for meetings with every president since Nixon and to gatherings all over the country.
*** No resolution ***
In their quest to resolve their father's status, Poole's two brothers visited the crash site in Vietnam in 1995, she said.
"Mom wanted to see that Dad would be accounted for, that he wouldn't just remain missing in action," she said.
In July 1994, the family visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, although her mother was in a wheelchair and required morphine to ease the pain of cancer, Poole said.
After seeing her husband's name on the black granite wall, Laura Poole told her children not to give up.
After the Clinton administration normalized diplomatic relations with the Vietnamese, arrangements were made to examine the crash site of Rose 01, about nine miles from Hanoi.
After several excavations and DNA comparisons four years ago, the Army lab positively identified 19 bone fragments that were to be turned over to the family for burial. The Poole family is still waiting for a final resolution.
Poole said part of the delay has been in identifying the remains of the other missing crewman. She also said President Clinton is credited with the diplomatic initiative that led to the discovery of her father's body but his administration has not provided enough money to adequately finance the identification lab and the search efforts.
Poole is looking forward to the day when she and her brothers and sisters are allowed to bury the remains of their father next to their mother's grave in Bossier City.
"I hope it is soon. I'd like to see this resolved. We've all been in this fight together," she said.
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http://www.houmatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20030930/APN/309301097
Remains of soldier missing in Vietnam found
The Associated Press
September 30. 2003 7:13PM
BOSSIER CITY, La. - A Bossier City man is awaiting the arrival of his father's remains, after they were discovered in Vietnam more than 30 years after the soldier went missing. David Poole was barely a teenager when his father, Charlie, went to Vietnam. He never came home.
"It was Tuesday. I'll never forget the day," David Poole said of Dec. 19, 1972, the day his father's B-52 was shot down during a bombing run over Hanoi. David was 13 years old. The B-52's six-man crew bailed out as the bomber erupted into a fireball and then crashed. Four were captured. Two were never found, including Charlie Poole, a gunner. It wasn't until 1994 that officials were able to find a witness who could pinpoint where Poole's plane went down.
The impact had created a crater near Hanoi that filled with water. A year later, the wreckage was found, including some human remains. Those remains were returned to a forensics lab in Hawaii in 1996 for identification. David Poole had known for the last two years they were most likely his father's. But it wasn't until this week that the remains were positively identified.
"We always hoped that he would come home alive," David Poole said. "It was not until '96, when they found remains associated with his aircraft, that that hope kind of faded and it became a reality that he gave the ultimate sacrifice. "It's kind of hard to describe. It's bittersweet sadness, yet there's great joy in knowing that he's coming home."
David's mother, Laura, held out hope her husband or his remains would be found. She died of cancer in 1994, never knowing for sure. Two weeks before she died, Laura Poole paid one last visit to the Vietnam Wall in Washington, where her husband's name is among those killed in the war.
"At the wall, she looked up at me from her wheelchair and said, 'David, I'll know before you do,'" she said. Laura Poole is buried at Hillcrest Cemetery in Bossier. Beside her is an empty grave marked with a memorial plaque with her husband's name on it.
David Poole will fly to Hawaii in two weeks to claim his father's remains and bring them to Bossier City for burial. Charlie Poole will be buried beside his wife.