YONAN, KENNETH JOSEPH

Remains Returned April 1988, Identified November 1988

Name: Kenneth Joseph Yonan
Rank/Branch: O3/US Army
Unit: Advisor Team 22, MACV
Date of Birth: 18 July 1947
Home City of Record: Chicago IL
Date of Loss: 24 April 1972
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 143913N 1074958E (ZB051218)
Status (in 1973): Prisoner of War
Category: 1
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground

Other Personnel in Incident: George W. Carter; Wayde L. Ellen; James E.
Hunsicker; Johnny M. Jones; Franklin Zollicoffer; Robert W. Brownlee (all
missing); Charles M. Lea; Rickey V. Vogel (helicopter crew, rescued); Julius
G. Warmath; John P. Keller; Walter H. Ward (helicopter passengers, rescued);
Charles W. Gordon, Cao Ky Chi (evaded capture near Dak To)

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 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: 01 January 1990.
Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK 2020.

REMARKS: LAST SEEN ON WATER TOWER

SYNOPSIS: On the evening of April 23, 1972, Capt. Kenneth J. Yonan
accompanied his ARVN counterpart to a water tower located on the
northwestern edge of the Tanh Canh base camp compound near Dak To, Kontum
Province, South Vietnam. Yonan was an advisor assigned to Advisory Team 22,
MACV, and was assisting the ARVN 42nd Regiment based there.

At about 0530 hours on April 24, Capt. Yonan was still in the water tower
when Viet Cong attacked the camp perimeter. Although tanks fired at and hit
the water tower, two other advisors spoke to Capt. Yonan after the firing
and Yonan reported that he was not hit and planned to join the other
advisors when it was safe to do so. Radio contact was maintained with Yonan
until 0730 hours. The other U.S. advisors began escape and evasion
operations from the beleaguered compound.

Team 22 Advisors Maj. George W. Carter, Maj. Julius G. Warmath, and Capt.
John P. Keller, were extracted by helicopter. The aircraft was a UH1H from
the 52nd Aviation Battalion, 17th Aviation Group, (serial #69-15715) and was
flown by Lt. James E. Hunsicker. WO Wade L. Ellen was the co-pilot of the
chopper, and SP4 Charles M. Lea, and SP5 Rickey V. Vogel were crewmen. Other
persons extracted included 1Lt. Johnny M. Jones, from the 52nd Aviation
Battalion; SP4 Franklin Zollicoffer, from the U.S. Army Installation at
Pleiku, and Sgt. Walter H. Ward, unit not specified.

The helicopter departed to the northwest from Dak To, but was apparently hit
by enemy fire, as it crashed and burned on a small island in the Dak Poko
River about 500 meters from the end of the dock to the runway. Because of
the rolling terrain, personnel at the airfield did not see the aircraft
impact. A pilot flying over the wreckage reported that the helicopter was
burning, but they could see no survivors. It was later discovered that five
people did survive the crash - Warmath, Keller, Vogel, Ward and Lea.
According to their statements, Hunsicker, Ellen, Zollicoffer, Jones and
Carter were all dead.

Two other Team 22, MACV Advisors, LtCol. Robert W. Brownlee and Capt.
Charles W. Gordon, and their ARVN interpreter, Sgt. Cao Ky Chi, were in a
bunker near the airstrip approximately 4 kilometers to the west of the base
camp when they were forced to withdraw under heavy enemy attack. They
proceeded south of the compound across the Dak Poko River, but LtCol.
Brownlee became separated from the others as they were advancing up a hill.
Sgt. Chi and Capt. Gordon called out to him, but received no response. From
the top of the hill, Sgt. Chi heard the enemy call out to someone in
Vietnamese to halt and raise their hands. Sgt. Chi believed the Viet Cong
were speaking to LtCol. Brownlee. Gordon and Chi evaded capture and
eventually made their way to safety.

A Vietnamese who was captured and subsequently released reported that he had
talked to another prisoner who had witnessed LtCol.Brownlee's death. He was
told that LtCol. Brownlee had killed himself with his own pistol when
communist soldiers told him to raise his hands in an attempt to capture him.
Additional hearsay reports of his suicide were reported by another ARVN
source.

Yonan never caught up with the others. For three days, helicopter searches
were made of the area with no success. Ground search, because of the hostile
threat in the area, was not practical.

In April 1988, the Vietnamese "discovered" the remains of Capt. Kenneth J.
Yonan and returned them to the U.S. in a spirit of stepped-up cooperation on
the POW/MIA issue. For nearly 20 years, this 1969 West Point graduate was a
prisoner of war - alive or dead. His family now knows with certainty that he
is dead, but may never learn how - or when - he died.

In addition to the reports regarding Brownlee's death, a South Vietnamese
soldier reported that he observed the capture of one "big" American from the
camp. Another report described the capture of a U.S. Captain stationed at
the camp.

Since the war ended, reports and refugee testimony have convinced many
authorities that not only do the Vietnamese possess several hundred sets of
Americans' remains, more startlingly, they also control hundreds of living
American prisoners.

As long as they are allowed to do so, the Vietnamese will return remains at
politically expedient intervals. As long as they are allowed to do so, they
will hold our men prisoner.

Kenneth Joseph Yonan graduated from West Point in 1969.

Long after accepting Ken's remains, Mrs. Yonan wondered if she had made a
mistake. She often asked if it was too late to exhume his remains for an
independent I.D. As of 1998, she still wondered.

--------------------------------------------------

Official data bases do not tell the whole story of this mission.

While Rickey Von Vogel is only noted as "rescued", in reality, Sp5 Vogel was
missing from April 24, 1972 until his return to military control May 6,
1972. During that time, despite severe wounds that included bullet wounds
and broken bones, he managed to escape and evade capture for almost 2 weeks
until his rescue.

Rickey Vogel was awarded the Purple Heart and 3 Air Medals in addition to
various Vietnam awards and decorations for his service. After his medical
evacuation and recovery, he continued to serve his country until his
discharge in 1974.

 

From: "W Page"
Subject: POW- Kenneth Yonan - captured mid May in bunker
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2006 20:50:32 -0500
My interest in POW/MIA (returned) Kenneth Yonan is very personal. Some of us ( D 1/12th Cav in AO at the time) were tasked to rescue him but couldn't because of the numerically superior enemy and armor.
 
Thought you may be interested to know of this document found at the Texas Tech Archives. The archive document number is actually the numerals within the named file. View the very last page at the bottom. Before Jimmy Gillespie ( my buddy in D 1/12th Cav), who was with me passed away he had reminded me of an American who had come into our tiny AO and stayed a bit and left. We never knew who he was. We always wondered if it could have been Ken Yonan or someone else. So many records are wrong or incomplete.
 
Note that Kenneth Yonan had previously been the CO of D 1/12th Cav before he transferred to Adv. Team 22. Captain Dombrosky replaced him at D 1/12th and in turn Captain John H. Wheeler replaced Capt. Dombrosky about mid March 1972.
 
 
Best,
 

24 April 1972 "TAN CANH LOG

National Archives Docs

 

 
Subject:  1972 MIA Kenneth Yonan - major information update of KIA @ Tan Canh Water Tower
Date: Sun, 26 Jan 2020 09:00:43 -0500 (EST)
From: William Page <wpage1@hughes.net>
To: POW Network <info@pownetwork.org>


 
So much information has recently been added to the TTU Vietnam Archives. He was listed as missing for so many years! You may consider adding this to Kenneth Yonan's bio.

 
Please see page 9 of 21:
 
 

 
<Snip>
".... On 23 April 1972 one infantry battalion engaged enemy forces early in the morning at a point not far from the division headquarters. At the same moment, the enemy pounded the Tan Canh base with a barrage of 122mm rockets. The ten tanks protecting Colonel Dat's division headquarters were sent out to drive back the enemy. Enemy Sagger antitank missiles destroyed eight of the tanks and damaged the other two, leaving both of them immobilized with broken tracks. Major Nhu, who had become a very close friend of mine when we served together in Qui Nhon, and Captain Kenneth Yonan, 23 years old and a graduate of West Point, climbed to the top of a tall water tower on the base to fight off the enemy using a 12.7mm machinegun mounted there. The enemy fired a Sagger missile at them, destroying the water tower and killing both men instantly. Our units at Tan Canh fought enemy forces throughout the day. General Ngo Du used air power to the maximum to support Colonel Dat....."

 
William B Page
B Co B 2/5th Cav 1971-'72
D 1/12th Cav 1972 (OPCON MR II / SRAG - John Paul Vann)

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01/2020

https://dpaa.secure.force.com/dpaaProfile?id=a0Jt000000yKI7TEAW

MAJ KENNETH JOSEPH YONAN

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On October 14, 1988, Central Identification Laboratory-Hawaii (CILHI, now DPAA) identified the remains of Major Kenneth Joseph Yonan, missing from the Vietnam War.

Major Yonan entered the U.S. Army from Illinois and was a member of Advisory Team 22, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. On April 24, 1972, he accompanied his Army of the Republic of Vietnam counterpart to a water tower located on the northwestern edge of Tanh Canh Base Camp near Dak To in Kontum Province, South Vietnam, when the camp was attacked by the Viet Cong. He radioed that he would remain in the water tower until it was safe to return to his post, but there was no further contact with him. He died at some point after this radio message, although the detailed circumstances surrounding his loss are not known and his body was not recovered at the time. Eventually, the Vietnamese government repatriated human remains that U.S. analysts identified as those of MAJ Yonan. 

Major Yonan is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. 

If you are a family member of this serviceman, you may contact your casualty office representative to learn more about your service member.