Name: Wayne Charles Irsch

Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force

Unit:

Date of Birth: 25 April 1942

Home City of Record: Tulsa OK

Date of Loss: 09 January 1968

Country of Loss: Laos

Loss Coordinates: 164500N 1060800E (XD234537)

Status (in 1973): Missing In Action

Category: 2

Acft/Vehicle/Ground: F4D

Others In Incident: Norman M. Green (missing)

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project (919/527-8079) 15 March 1991 from one

or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources,

correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Copyright

1991 Homecoming II Project.

REMARKS:

SYNOPSIS: Lt.Col. Norman M. Green was a pilot of an F4 Phantom in Vietnam. The

Phantom was one of the most sought after assignments for a pilot, as the

aircraft represented the ultimate fighter plane - a highly maneuverable jet

carrying the newest of sophisticated equipment which allowed bombing and

navigation to be directed by computer.

On January 9, 1968, Green was assigned a combat mission which took him over

Laos. His bombardier/navigator on the mission was 1Lt. Wayne C. Irsch. It was

his job to operate much of the high-tech equipment on the aircraft. When they

were near the city of Sepone in Savannakhet Province, Laos, their aircraft was

hit by enemy fire and crashed. Their loss location is listed as 40 miles

south-southeast of the Ban Karai Pass. Both men were classified Missing In

Action.

A September 13, 1968 statement by Soth Pethrasi was monitored from Puerto Rico

in which the names of several Americans were mentioned. The report stated that

"Smith, Christiano, Jeffords, and Mauterer" were part of "several dozen captured

Airmen" whom the Pathet Lao were "treating correctly and who were still in Laos.

Another name, Norman Morgan, captured January 9, 1968, was mentioned but is not

on lists of missing. This is believed to possibly correlate to Norman Green.

The Ban Karai Pass, on the border of Vietnam and Laos, is an area which claimed

many pilots during the war in Indochina. Many of the pilots were able to safely

reach the ground, but were not released at the end of the war. Although the

Pathet Lao stated publicly many times that they held prisoners that would be

released only from Laos, the U.S. did not include Laos in the agreement ending

American involvement in the war. Not a single American military prisoner of war

held in Laos has been released.

Tragically, nearly 1000 eyewitness reports of Americans held in captivity in

Southeast Asia have been received. They present a compelling case that Americans

are still being held today. Irsch and Green could be among them. If so, what

must they be thinking of us?

Wayne C. Irsch was promoted to the rank of Captain and Norman M. Green to the

rank of Colonel during the period they were maintained Missing in Action.

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