Hello, brothers and any sisters here. I just registered, so please be gentle. I'm old. It's been 46 years since my last combat mission - 1/1/73, just for one month of combat pay and tax break! Just before that date, our B-52D crew flew five Linebacker II missions during "The Eleven Days of Christmas" (great book!) - an exciting time in my young life. I was the crew's Navigator.
I became more and more proud of my three DFC's (two for Valor) and eight Air Medals (165 combat missions) over the years, but the loss of friends during those exciting years and since has become more painful. If it is of interest to anyone, we were a Select Crew, S-13 from Robins AFB, GA - usually in the lead bomber in our three-ship cells. AC - Captain John Alward, CP - Captain Robert Davis, RN - Captain David Muenier, EW - Captain Arthur Flores, Gunner - A1C Steven Dring and myself were the kids who went off to war. Muenier, the only one on the crew with prematurely grey hair, would call the pilots "Wally" and "The Beaver". At age 27, I'd had four ARC LIGHT deployments. Many we flew with had more.
In answers to the questions I've seen here, our crew was callsign LILAC TWO on B-52D 56-589 on April 23, 1972, bombing the Dragon's Jaw bridge area in North Vietnam when we were hit hard by a SAM just prior to the target. We were able to get the bombs at least NEAR the target but had to recover into DaNang AFB, just south of the DMZ, due to damage from 465 shrapnel holes throughout the airframe. Five engines were on fire, the gunner had to come forward due to loss of pressure in his little "green house" in the bomber's tail, we had no idea how much fuel was remaining, and The Beaver was busy until we landed trying to find equipment he controlled which was still working. Not much was. We were picked up by a KC-135 Tanker crew from U Tapao, Thailand, our home base, in the middle of the next morning, debriefed the following morning, and we were back on the flight schedule the next day. I don't know how many more missions BUFF 589 ever had after it was put back in the fleet in January, 1973 (all that time and 20,000 man hours - we broke her BAD). She was soon returned for a while to her home CONUS base, Blythville AFB, I think, was then transferred to Sheppard AFB, Texas for ground training in November, '73, and finally received her nose art of CITY OF BURKBURNETT (the town north of Sheppard) in 1991 to stand on static display until 2012 when maintenance became too expensive. She was replaced by a B-52G which also had an Arc Light/Linebacker history. I wish I had known. The Navy took all the pieces and I doubt if they respected her as I did.
https://www.sheppard.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/368066/city-of-burkburnett-b-52-static-display-replaced/BFN, my old and new friends. If you've read this far, thanks! If anyone still wants to get in touch with me, and it shouldn't be too difficult until I strap myself in for my last mission, I can be reached with a reply to this post or email:
drverploegh@gmail.com.
