BAKER, ARTHUR D.

Name: Arthur D. Baker
Rank/Branch: USAF, O3
Unit:
Date of Birth: 30 July 33
Home City of Record: San Antonio, TX
Date of Loss: 07 April 65
Country of Loss: Laos
Loss Coordinates: 193500, 1034700
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 3
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: B-57B

Remarks: Last seen on dive thru thin clouds.

Other Personnel In Incident: James W. Lewis

Source: Compiled by THE P.O.W. NETWORK 02 February 93 from the
following published sources - POW/MIA's -- Report of the Select Committee
on POW/MIA Affairs United States Senate -- January 13, 1993. "The Senate
Select Committee staff has prepared case summaries for the priority cases
that the Administration is now investigating. These provide the facts about
each case, describe the circumstances under which the individual was lost,
and detail the information learned since the date of loss. Information in
the case summaries is limited to information from casualty files, does not
include any judgments by Committee staff, and attempts to relate essential
facts. The Committee acknowledges that POW/MIAs' primary next-of- kin know
their family members' cases in more comprehensive detail than summarized
here and recognizes the limitations that the report format imposes on these
summaries."

On April 7, 1965, Baker and James [sic] were crewmen on a B-57B, one in a
flight of four aircraft on an interdiction mission launched from Bien Hoa
Air Base, South Vietnam and with its target in Xieng Khouang Province, Laos.
The crew was last seen descending through thin overcast toward the target
area and it never reappeared. Extensive search and rescue efforts through
April 12th failed to locate either the aircraft or its crew.

On April 14, 1965, the New China News Agency reported the shoot down of a
B-57 approximately three miles north-northeast of the town of Khang Khay.
This was described as the first B-57 shoot down of an aircraft launched from
South Vietnam.

Both crewmen were initially reported missing in action in South Vietnam
while on a classified mission. Their loss location was later changed to
Laos. There was limited wartime reporting about U.S. aircraft losses in the
general area the crewmen were last reported but they could not be correlated
to this specific incident. U.S. intelligence continues to receive
information which may correlate to this shoot down but provides no positive
information on the fate of the crewmen.

In January 1974 Major Baker's next-of-kin requested his case review go
forward and he was declared killed in action, body not recovered, in January
1974. Lewis was declared dead/body not recovered, in April 1982. Returning
POWs were unable to provide any information on the fate of these two
servicemen.


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