"All Biographical and loss information on POWs provided by Operation Just Cause have been supplied by Chuck and Mary Schantag of POWNET. Please check with POWNET regularly for updates."


I am proud to be an AMERICAN!!! I also think it is a disgrace that our soldiers are STILL NOT HOME !!!




THIS PAGEIS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF

JAMES RANDALL WILLIAMS

WE MUST NEVER FORGET !!!

Name: James Randall Williams

Rank/Branch: E4/US Air Force

Unit: 314th Tactical Airlift Wing, Nha Trang Airbase, South Vietnam

Date of Birth: 28 March 1945

Home City of Record: Charlotte NC

Date of Loss: 29 December 1967

Country of Loss: North Vietnam

Loss Coordinates: 220900N 1032200E (UK315501)

Status (in 1973): Missing In Action

Category: 4

Acft/Vehicle/Ground: C130E

Other Personnel In Incident: Edward J. Darcy; Gean P. Clapper; Charles P. Claxton; Wayne A. Eckley; Donald E. Fisher; Edwin N. Osborne; Frank C. Parker; Gerald G. VanBuren; Gordon J. Wenaas; Jack McCrary; (all missing)

REMARKS: RADIO CONTACT LOST

SYNOPSIS: On December 29, 1967, a C130E aircraft departed Nha Trang Airbase shortly after midnight on an operational mission over North Vietnam. The eleven man crew aboard the aircraft included Maj. Charles P. Claxton; Capt. Edwin N. Osborne Jr., and Capt. Gerald G. Van Buren (all listed as pilots); and crewmen SSgt. Edward J. Darcy; SSgt. Gean P. Clapper; SSgt. Wayne A. Eckley; LtCol. Donald E. Fisher; TSgt. Jack McCrary; Capt. Frank C. Parker III; Capt. Gordon J. Wenaas; and Sgt. James R. Williams. At 4:30 a.m., the pilot made radio contact with Nha Trang and said the mission was progressing as scheduled. No further contact was made. The aircraft's last known position was in extreme northwest North Vietnam, in mountainous Lai Chau Province. The eleven Americans aboard the aircraft were declared Missing in Action. When the war ended, and 591 Americans were released from Vietnamese prison camps, the crew of the C130 was not among them. Although the Vietnamese pledged, as part of the Paris Peace Accords, to release all prisoners and make the fullest possible accounting of the missing, they have done neither. The Vietnamese deny any knowledge of the crew of the C130. 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. If even one was left alive (and many authorities estimate the numbers to be in the hundreds), we have failed as a nation until and unless we do everything possible to secure his freedom and bring him home.




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