BURGESS, SIMON
Name: Simon Burgess Rank/Branch: Flight Lieutenant/Royal Air Force Unit: Age: Home City: Great Britain Date of Loss: 23 January 1991 Country of Loss: Iraq Loss Coordinates: Status: Released POW (see text) Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Tornado
Other Personnel in Incident: Bob Ankerson (released)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 09 March 1991 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, published sources, interviews. Updated by the POW NETWORK 2002.
REMARKS: OPERATION DESERT STORM
SYNOPSIS: On January 16, 1991, Allied forces began concentrated air strikes on Iraqi military targets in Iraq and Kuwait. The United Kingdom had the second largest military contingent of troops after the U.S. with 35-40,000 troops, 75 Tornado fighter/bombers, and sixteen warships.
Squadron Leader Bob Ankerson and Flight Lieutenant Simon Burgess were crewmen of a Tornado GR1 fighter/bomber which flew in the early strikes of the war. On January 23, 1991, their aircraft was shot down and the two airmen were captured by the Iraqis.
Beginning on January 20, Allied POWs began to appear on Iraqi television and radio making "peace statements." The men were clearly under great duress and apparently had been tortured. Despite condemnation from world leaders, the propaganda continued. Then during the last week of January, Iraq announced that it would no longer show Allied POWs on television. Many observers fear that the lack of media - even propaganda - will keep the POWs an international secret, limiting the chances the world community will demand their release.
According to national television, all Coalition POWs were released by March 6 except for one Kuwaiti. It is assumed that Ankerson and Burgess were among those released. U.S. media did not focus on British and other Coalition POWs to the extent that all names were immediately known.