by Senior Airman Derek VanHorn
35th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
5/28/2013 - MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan -- They
shared the same name. They flew and fought the same types of Wild
Weasel fighter jet missions. They looked alike and the family says they
even displayed the same mannerisms. It's a fascinating tale of a father
and son who lived the same life, complete with a sobering twist.
They never met.
Forty years ago, aptly named John Wayne Seuell was living a real life
war movie, flying F-4D Phantoms over hostile Vietnamese jungles as an
Air Force captain. It was almost noon on June 6, 1972, when his parental
duty was severed by fate, only days away from welcoming his only child
into the world.
Reports released from the Pentagon tell a mind-bending story of what are believed to be Seuell's final moments.
While on a combat air patrol mission northwest of Hanoi, Seuell was with
Lt. Col. James Fowler and their F-4D was the lead aircraft in a flight
of four. All aircraft arrived in the target area without incident, so
far so good, until the sortie made its way back toward its base
destination in Thailand. While approaching surface-to-air missile
launching sites near heavily guarded Yen Bai Airfield in North Vietnam,
the launch of an enemy missile was detected.
Although evasive maneuvers were initiated, it wasn't enough as the
missile exploded below the tail section of Seuell's plane. The aircraft
burst into flames, but did not disintegrate. No canopies or parachutes
were seen. About 30 minutes later, flights in the area reported hearing
two emergency signals, but no contact could be made.
Because the incident occurred deep in enemy territory, no organized
search could be made. Both pilots held the status of missing in action
for many years. The only things that remained of the crash site were
questions.
Two months following the crash, John David Seuell was born, unaware of
the irrecoverable tragedy surrounding him. At the time, it was
impossible to know the parallels that would arise between he and his
father. But being born into such a storied pedigree, the telltale signs
were always there.
"I knew about the circumstances [of my father] growing up," said Seuell,
now the deputy commander of the 35th Operations Group. "From the
youngest age I always wanted to be a pilot. I was surrounded by it; I
knew it was what I was going to do."
Seuell's bloodline is United States Air Force; he's never known anything
else. To take it a step further, life leading up to his commission was
essentially a formality - he was always going to fill his father's
footsteps. It was just how closely, however, no one could have foreseen.
While his father's playground was dense, alien jungle, Seuell started in
the sandbox. His first missions as an F-16 fighter pilot led him over
Southern Iraq during Operation Southern Watch to fight the antagonistic
presence of Saddam Hussein.
"It was an eye-opening experience," said Seuell, now an 18-year Air
Force veteran. "It was really a gut check when you get up in the morning
and plan to spend your day far, far away from anyone friendly."
It was decades later, and the only thing separating the father and son was time. They were always fighting the same fight.
At Misawa, the 35th Fighter Wing is home to the Wild Weasels - U.S. Air
Force F-16 Fighting Falcons that provide lethal suppression of
enemy-air-defenses across the globe. A squadron that helps make up the
35 FW is the 13th Fighter Squadron, which was retained when the 432nd FW
was reflagged by the 35 FW during a changeover in the fall of 1994.
Colonel Seuell flew 13 FS aircraft in his primal flying days as a
lieutenant and now still supervises the squadron in his current
position.
While attending training in San Antonio in his early twenties, Seuell
got his hands on an unclassified report about his father's last flight.
"It described the airplane [my father] was in, and painted on the side
of the intake was a red '13' with a black panther, which is an
indication that it was a 13 FS airplane," he said with a grin.
As the time passed, more and more details began to emerge. But one
looming question remained; what exactly happened to his father?
Villagers from small towns near the crash site were interviewed, along
with SAM site operators working that day. People who claimed to have
visited the crash site shortly after still could provide no concrete
answers.
It wasn't until 1995, in San Angelo, Texas, when Seuell was perusing
through a bookstore and discovered a book titled "Inside Hanoi's Secret
Archives," authored by Malcolm McConnell. Scrolling through the index,
Seuell was taken back after seeing his father's name listed. Looking
further, it even had his picture inside and definitively listed his
father as killed in action.
It was that moment when Seuell finally received the answers to all the questions racing through his head over the years.
"For me personally, I have no doubt that this is my dad," Seuell said,
pointing to the pictures he pulled from a 4-inch thick binder full of
his father's heritage. "He was able to exit the aircraft ... but was
unable to survive the ejection."
Having never been allowed the luxury of meeting his father, Seuell said
the emotions surrounding his death were more prideful than anything
else.
"I've always looked up to the sacrifice of my father, what he used it
for and what he had given," he said. "He was always a role model and he
made being a pilot more serious. I felt like I knew the consequences
more clearly.
"There really is a more serious side of sacrifice and knowledge you have to be willing to give if required."
The more Seuell unearthed about his father's life and sacrifice, the
more the legacy came bursting through the woodwork. John Wayne Seuell
was elite company.
During one memorable flight on April 16 of 1972, Seuell was in a group
of four fighter jets that recorded two MiG-21 kills that afternoon. On
that flight, he flew alongside decorated Vietnam MiG killers Fred
Olmstead and Jeffrey Feinstein.
Seuell doesn't have to go far to find the memories of that day. A few
left turns and a couple stoplights away from his flight line office is
the Misawa's Officer Club, where two red star plaques posted above the
bar recognize the pilots' feats.
That mission, which has been widely documented and published across the
world, is remembered as one of the more famous dogfights in Vietnam
history. It's known as Basco Flight, now a staple call sign in the Wild
Weasel lineage.
As an F-16 fighter pilot with ties to the same squadron his father flew
with in his heyday, Seuell flies SEAD missions regularly with the Wild
Weasels. And the call sign of the most recent mission he flew?
You guessed it -- Basco.
How could it have been anything else?
"That was pretty cool," Seuell reflected. "I grew up flying fighter
jets, became a Wild Weasel pilot and train against the same threats that
existed in Vietnam."
In 40 years, so much has changed. Yet, still, so much remains the same.
"In some ways it may be a bit poetic; I am trained to go after the things that killed my dad."
Friday, May 31, 2013
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