"J" Forrest George Trembley
Rank/Branch: O2/US Navy
Unit: Attack Squadron 196, USS CONSTELLATION
Date of Birth: 28 May 1942 (Norwich CT)
Home City of Record: Spokane WA
Date of Loss: 21 August 1967
Country of Loss: China
Loss Coordinates: 213300N 1073200E (YJ519957)
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: A6A
Other Personnel in Incident
Dain V. Scott (missing); from other A6s:
Robert J.
Flynn (released POW) and Jimmy L. Buckley (ashes returned); Leo T.
Profilet and
William M. Hardman (both released POWs); on USAF F105s: Lynn K. Powell
and Merwin
L. Morrill (both remains returned)
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.
Date Compiled: 15 March 1990
SYNOPSIS: On August 21, 1967, four aircraft launched from the USS
CONSTELLATION
with the assignment to strike the Duc Noi rail yard four miles north of
Hanoi.
The aircraft flew from Attack Squadron 196, based on board the carrier.
The route from the coast-in point was uneventful with the exception of
some
large weather cells building up. Further along their route they received
indications of launched Surface-to-Air Missiles (SAMs) and observed
bursting
85mm anti-aircraft fire.
Lieutenant Commander "J" Forrest G. Trembley, bombardier/navigator of
one
Intruder, reported he had been hit and he was advised to reverse course
and
return to the coast. He transmitted that he was experiencing no
difficulty and
would proceed to the target rather than egress alone. Commander Jimmy L.
Buckley
was the pilot of this aircraft. Several SAMs had been launched at this
time and
a transmission was made "Heads up for the Air Force strike" which was
being
conducted in the vicinity of the A-6 target. An aircraft was hit which
was
thought to be an Air Force aircraft.
Two F105D aircraft, flown by Air Force Major Merwin L. Morrill and 1Lt.
Lynn K.
Powell, were shot down at this approximate location on August 21, 1967.
It is
believed that one of these is the aircraft referred to in Navy
information
concerning this incident. The remains of both Air Force crewmen were
repatriated
on June 3, 1983. While Morrill had been classified Missing in Action, it
was
believed that he was dead. Powell was classified as Killed in
Action/Body Not
Recovered.
The division leader was hit while in the target area and two good
parachutes
were observed. The crew of this A6, Commander William M. Hardman and
Capt. Leo
T. Profilet, were captured by the North Vietnamese. Both men were
released from
captivity on March 15, 1973.
The other three aircraft began their egress from the target.
Surface-to-air
missiles (SAMs) were in flight everywhere and the aircraft were
maneuvering
violently. A large weather cell separated them from the coast which
precluded
their egress further north than planned.
Another transmission was heard -- "Skipper get out" -- and the voice was
recognized as that of Lieutenant Commander Trembley. A SAM detonated
between two
of the other aircraft, two parachutes and flying debris were observed.
Lieutenant Commander Trembley transmitted, "This is Milestone 2,
Milestone 1 was
hit, 2 good chutes, 2 good chutes." The multitude of SAMs along with
deteriorating weather may be the reason for the flight to ultimately
stray well
north of their planned egress track. It was believed that Lieutenant
Commander
Trembley's aircraft was shot down in the vicinity of the Chinese
boarder.
Trembley and his BN, Dain V. Scott, were placed in a Missing In Action
casualty
status. Their case was discussed with the Chinese government by then
Congressmen
Hale Boggs and Gerald Ford, with very little information being obtained.
In their navigation around the weather, one of the remaining two A-6
aircraft
observed MIGS in a run out of the overcast above Lieutenant Commander
Flynn's
aircraft. Requests for assistance were radioed but went unanswered. The
tracking
of the aircraft by airborne early warning aircraft showed them crossing
the
Chinese border. The maximum penetration was about eleven miles. A visual
search
could not be conducted due to poor weather in the vicinity of the last
known
position.
Later that day Peking Radio reported "two U.S. A-6 aircraft were shot
down when
they flagrantly intruded into China airspace and one crewman was
captured".
Lieutenant Commander Flynn was held prisoner in China, his pilot,
Commander
Jimmy L. Buckley, was reportedly killed in the shoot down.
On March 15, 1973 Lieutenant Commander Flynn was repatriated to U.S.
jurisdiction in Hong Kong and returned to the United States. The ashes
of
Commander Jimmy L. Buckley were returned by the Chinese in December
1975.
Two Air Force bombers and three of the four Navy aircraft on the strike
mission
on August 21, 1967 were shot down. Trembley and Scott, of the eight
Americans
shot down on August 21, 1967, are the only two who remain Missing in
Action.
When American involvement in the Vietnam war ended by means of peace
accords
signed in 1973, Americans held in countries other than Vietnam were not
negotiated for. Consequently, almost all of these men remain missing.
During the
Nixon Administration and following administrations, relations with China
have
eased, but the U.S. seems reluctant to address the years-old problem of
the fate
of her men in China.
Since the war ended, nearly 10,000 reports have been received relating
to
Americans missing in Southeast Asia. Many authorities believe there are
hundreds
who are still alive, held captive. Whether Trembley and Scott could be
among
them is not known. What seems certain, however, is that they have been
abandoned
for political expediency.
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is to keep pushing this issue
inside the Beltway...
The need to get specific answers is more important now than ever before.
If still alive, some MIAs are now in their 70s...They don't have much
time left. We have to demand the answers from the bureaucrats and keep
standing on their necks (figuratively speaking) until they get the
message that THEY work for US and that we are serious about getting
these long overdue responses. Diplomatic considerations aside...
We can no longer allow questionable protocols established by
pseudo-aristocratic armchair strategists, to determine or influence the
fate of the men who were in the trenches while the diplomats were
sharing sherry and canapes and talking about "Their Plans" for the
future of SE Asia.
If you'd like to see what some others are doing in addition to writing
their congressmen, senators and the Whitehouse, check out some of these
sites:
Gunny's Site
Barb's Gems
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/2107/pow.html
http://www.sihope.com/~tipi/mia.html
And of course my 2 favorite sites. Not only because they are my Aunts, but because they are made from the heart:
Moving Wall Pictures Auntie Shan took herself