Name: Robert Norman Smith
Rank/Branch: O5/US Marine Corps
Unit: HAMS 11, MAG 11
Date of Birth: 20 September 1926
Home City of Record: Trucksville PA
Date of Loss: 19 August 1969
Country of Loss: North Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 170400N 1070600E (XE810020)
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: F4B
Other Personnel in Incident: John N. Flanigan (missing)
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: 01 January 1990
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: On August 19, 1969, Lt.Col. Robert N. Smith, pilot, and Capt.
John N. Flanigan, radar intercept officer, departed Da Nang in their F4B
Phantom fighter/bomber jet aircraft to fly escort on a photo
reconnaissance mission just north of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Smith's aircraft made one run over the target, and then he and the other
aircraft separated and were supposed to rendezvous for a second run.
Smith never returned for the second run, and contact was never
established with Smith or his backseater.
It was never determined whether Smith's aircraft was shot down or
crashed because of a malfunction. However, the area in which they were
last seen, about 5 miles east of the city of Vinh Linh in Quang Binh
Province, North Vietnam, was relatively heavily defended. The U.S.
believes there is a high degree of probability that the enemy knew what
happened to Smith and Flanigan.
Smith and Flanigan were not among the prisoners of war that were
released in 1973. High ranking U.S. officials admit their dismay that
"hundreds" of suspected American prisoners of war did not return.
Alarmingly, evidence continues to mount that Americans were left as
prisoners in Southeast Asia and continue to be held today. Unlike "MIAs"
from other wars, most of the nearly 2500 men and women who remain
missing in Southeast Asia can be accounted for. Smith
and Flanigan could
be among them. Isn't it time we brought our men home?