Name: Glenn R. Cook

Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force

Unit: 21 TFW

Date of Birth: 10 September 1945

Home City of Record: Charlotte NC

Date of Loss: 21 October 1969

Country of Loss: South Vietnam

Loss Coordinates: 121000N 1084700E (BP588495)

Status (in 1973): Missing In Action

Category: 4

Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: O2A

Other Personnel in Incident: John L. Espenshield, remains returned 1989

REMARKS:

Source: Compiled by P.O.W. NETWORK June 1997 from one or more of the

following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with

POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.

SYNOPSIS: Major John Espenshied was the observer aboard an O2A Cessna

observation aircraft on a flight over South Vietnam on October 21, 1969.

Captain Glenn Cook was the pilot of the aircraft.

The O2 was a stopgap replacement aircraft for the O1 "Birddog" until the

North American OV10A arrived in Vietnam. The O1, O2 and OV10 served as

vehicles for forward air contollers (FAC) in Vietnam, as well as

reconnaissance aircraft. The small aircraft would fly in rather low and mark

targets for armed aircraft to follow with airstrikes. The O1, O2 and OV10

were a sure signal to the Vietnamese that bombing would follow, and while

they were greatly feared for a time, as time passed, the enemy became more

and more aggressive in trying to knock the planes out before the impending

strikes could be directed. All three aircraft lacked adequate armour to

protect its passengers from heavy anti-aircraft fire.

At a point where the Provinces of Tuyen Duc, Ninh Thuan and Khanh Hoa meet,

the aircraft went down, and neither man was found. At the time, the U.S.

judged that there could be no way of knowing whether the enemy found the

crash, or whether they had been killed or survived. They were listed as

Missing In Action.

For four years, Espenshied's family waited to see if he had been captured,

and would be released with other American POWs in 1973, but he was not. The

Vietnamese, who had pledged earlier that year to release all POWs and

account for as many as possible of the missing, denied any knowledge of

Espenshied.

For the next 15 years, reports flowed in relating to Americans missing in

Southeast Asia. By the end of 1988, over 8,000 of them had been received by

the U.S. convincing many authorities that hundreds of Americans are still

alive in captivity. The Espenshied family did not want to write their man

off as dead, but yet the thought that he could be alive and abandoned to the

enemy was more than they could bear.

In December, 1988, the Vietnamese "discovered" the body of John Espenshied

and returned it to U.S. control. Like nearly 2500 other Americans, alive and

dead, he had been a chess piece in a political game for nearly 20 years.

For the Espenshied family, life can be resumed without the horror of not

knowing. For nearly 2500 other families, however, the agony continues. And

for hundreds of abandoned American prisoners, life goes on.

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