HRDLICKA, DAVID LOUIS
Name: David Louis Hrdlicka
Rank/Branch: O3/US Air Force
Unit: 563rd Tactical Fighter Squadron, Takhli AB, Thailand
Date of Birth: 30 December 1931
Home City of Record: Littleton CO
Date of Loss: 18 May 1965
Country of Loss: Laos
Loss Coordinates: 202240N 1041250E (VH160480)
Status (In 1973): Prisoner of War
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: F105
Other Personnel In Incident: (none missing)
REMARKS:
Source: Compiled from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S.
Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published
sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK.
SYNOPSIS: On May 18, 1965, Captain David L. Hrdlicka was the pilot of the
lead F105 aircraft in a four-aircraft flight over Houa Phan Province, Laos
when his aircraft was hit by ground fire. Capt. Hrdlicka radioed that he had
a fire light, and other members of the flight confirmed his aricraft was on
fire.
Capt. Hrdlicka successfully ejected and parachuted to the ground, landing in
a small valley beside a village in the Sam Neua area. His parachute was seen
opening and he was seen on the ground being led away by natives. Natives
were observed rolling up Hrdlicka's parachute. A helicopter pilot landed at
a nearby village and was told that the Pathet Lao picked him up.
On July 22, 1966, the Vietnamese newspaper, Quan Nhan Dan featured a story
on his capture. On July 26, 1966, a tape recorded broadcast was made by
Capt. Hrdlicka in which he read from a personal letter to Prince
Souphanouvang. In this broadcast, a letter which attributed to Hrdlicka was
read expressing his eagerness to see his wife and children. Radio Peking
also broadcast a statement quoting Lao sources that Hrdlicka was their
prisoner.
In August, 1966, the Russian news service, PRAVDA, ran a photograph of
Hrdlicka, still in his flight suit, head bowed, and an armed guard behind
him. Photos of Capt. Hrdlicka were received from several sources.
U.S. Intelligence reported that he was held in a cave near Sam Neua, Laos,
and reports were monitored for several years believed to pertain to him.
David Hrdlicka was photographed in captivity as late as 1968 or 1969.
The caves at Sam Neua have been said to be extensive and house a compound,
including facilities for prisoners, rivaling a small city. The number of
Americans held in these caves, hidden from surveillance, has been estimated
by some to be in the hundreds.
When 591 Americans were released in 1973, David Hrdlicka was not among them.
The Vietnamese claimed that the Pathet Lao had no facilities for holding
prisoners, although there is ample intelligence to indicate otherwise. And,
although the Lao publicly stated they held "tens of tens" of American
prisoners, the U.S. has never negotiated for these prisoners. Consequently,
not one of the nearly 600 Americans lost in Laos has ever been released.
According to the official Air Force account of the loss of David Hrdlicka,
"no information was ever received regarding his fate". He remains on the
rolls of the missing because "his remains have not been recovered and
returned."
Hrdlicka is among nearly 2500 Americans still missing, prisoner or
unaccounted for in Southeast Asia. Perhaps Vietnam and her puppet state,
Laos, hoped that the photographs and tapes would be forgotten. David
Hrdlicka is not forgotten, and will not be forgotten until the communist
governments of Southeast Asia release all Prisoners of War and account for
the missing.
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