I came across this webshots photo of F-4B BuNo. 153001 on display in Hanoi
Taken by Mikehatesfans:
http://community.webshots.com/photo/339685054/339695632jHwwrA
and this one of 153001 taken just shy of 6 months earlier by Mr. Yatsuhashi, AGC
http://usn-ac-japan.hp.infoseek.co.jp/sqdn/vf-114/f-4b(153001).htm
My question is what is likely hood of recovering a combat veteran such as 153001 for restoration? What kind of obstalces would one face when dealing with the bureaucracy of Vietnam? Haven't other aircraft already been recovered and taken to Austrailia? I'm wondering what measures they took to procure the aircraft. Does anyone know if there are any groups actively persuing the rights to recover aircraft and aritfacts in Vietnam currently? It would be nice to think that one day when the Kittyhawk is finally retired from service she would serve on as a museum ship where one day maybe you could see Buno. 153001 restored and displayed. Just curious thanks.
Incase anyone is wondering here is the story of BuNo. 153001:
F-4B BuNo. 153001 of the VF-114 stationed aboard the USS Kitty Hawk crashed after ingesting debris from it's own Zuni rockets and flamed out during a flak suppression mission against anti-aircraft defenses around the Thanh Hoa (Dragon's Jaw) Bridge on May 14, 1967. Both the Pilot and the RIO ejected and were captured. 153001 bellylanded on a mud flat and was recovered by North Vietnamese and is now on display outside a museum in Hanoi. Both Lt. CDR C.E. Southwick and LT. D. Rollins endured just under 6 years of imprisonment and were later released on March 4, 1973.
Many missions were conducted against the Thanh Hoa Bridge in North Vietnam. One hundred and four pilots were shot down within a seventy five square mile vicinity of this infamous target. The communists used the bridge to push Russian and Chinese suppies southward to the front by rail, truck and foot. It stood for almost ten years against every conceivable ordinance that the Americans could muster via air power, surviving 873 sorties and the cost of 11 aircraft. For the North Vietnamese, it assumed a prominence that approached mythical status and became a symbol for the North of their detmination, fortitude and cause. It was finally destroyed by smart bombs dropped by A-4 Skyhawks, covered by F-4 Phantoms on the 13 May 1972.
Thanks again
Shay
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Semper Fortis