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Name: Bennie Lamar Fryer 
Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force 
Unit: 72nd Strat Wing, Guam 
Date of Birth: 28 October 1945 
Home City of Record: Stockton CA 
Date of Loss: 28 December 1972 
Country of Loss: North Vietnam 
Loss Coordinates: 210700N 1055600E (WJ980330) 
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action 
Category: 2 
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: B52D 

Other Personnel in Incident: Allen L. Johnson (remains returned); James W. 
Gough; James C. Condon; Frank D. Lewis Samuel B. Cusimano (all released POWs) 

Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 October 1990 from one or more of 
the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with 
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. 

REMARKS: RELSD 730329 BY DRV - Remains Returned 30 September 1977


SYNOPSIS: Frustrated by problems in negotiating a peace settlement, and 
pressured by a Congress and public wanting an immediate end to American 
involvement in Vietnam, President Nixon ordered the most concentrated air 
offensive of the war - known as Linebacker II - in December 1972. During the 
offensive, sometimes called the "Christmas bombings," 40,000 tons of bombs were 
dropped, primarily over the area between Hanoi and Haiphong. White House Press 
Secretary Ronald Ziegler said that the bombing would end only when all U.S. POWs 
were released and an internationally recognized cease-fire was in force. 

Linebacker II flights generally arrived over Hanoi in tight cells of three 
aircraft to maximize the mutual support benefits of their ECM equipment and flew 
straight and level to stabilize the bombing computers and ensure that all bombs 
fell on the military targets and not in civilian areas. 

The pilots of the early missions reported that "wall-to-wall SAMS" surrounded 
Hanoi as they neared its outskirts. The Christmas Bombings, despite press 
accounts to the contrary, were of the most precise the world had seen. 

On December 28, 1972, twelve aircraft were assigned to strike the Trung Quang 
rail yards near Hanoi. One three-ship cell was code-named Cobalt. The second 
B52D in the flight, Cobalt 01, assumed lead in the cell because the other two 
were experiencing problems with their electronic warfare equipment. At about 
2330 hours, the cell turned inbound on Hanoi and went to independent bombing 
mode, meaning each aircraft used its own radar to locate and attack the target. 

The cell saw medium to heavy antiaircraft fire ahead and soon began receiving 
SAM signals and saw SAM launches beginning. A total of 45 SAMs were fired at the 
cells. When Cobalt 01 was within sixty seconds of bomb release, two SAMS locked 
on and began tracking the aircraft. Lewis was able to evade these two, but 
received a near-direct hit by another while still in a violent evasive turn. 

Every crew member onboard received injuries from the impacting SAM fragments. 
The crew consisted of Capt. Frank D. Lewis, pilot and aircraft commander; Capt. 
Sam Cusimano, co-pilot; Maj. Allen Johnson, Electronic Warfare Officer (EWO); 
Lt.Col. Jim Condon, radar navigator; 1Lt. Bennie Fryer, navigator; and SMSgt. 
Jim Gough, gunner. 

Capt. Frank D. Lewis, the pilot, attempted to maintain control of the aircraft 
as it headed west, but he knew the aircraft had taken a fatal hit and was going 
down. The wings were on fire and the ruptured fuel tanks fed the rapidly 
spreading fire. All electrical systems were out, as well as the crew interphone 
system. The pilot verbally gave the order to bail out only forty seconds after 
the SAM impact. Lewis ejected, and the crew followed. 

The gunner, MSgt. James A. Gough, could not hear the ejection order, but knew 
that he would soon have to bail out. The flames from the burning aircraft 
extended back on both sides of the B52 to the gunner's turret, and he decided to 
wait for a better chance as long as the aircraft was still in level flight. 

By then, the other crew members who were able to eject had departed the plane. 
When the gunner saw that the aircraft was descending into the low undercast, he 
knew he had to leave then or lose his chance. When he jumped, he went through 
burning debris of the disintegrating engines and wings and had numerous pieces 
of wiring and metal fragments embedded in his body. Luckily, Gough was able to 
deploy his parachute. He was captured soon after he landed on the ground. 

The pilot, Capt. Lewis, was lucky to be captured alive after he landed in a rice 
paddy. A North Vietnamese peasant took Lewis' revolver and would have killed him 
on the spot if the gun had been loaded. As the click, click of the empty pistol 
sounded, NVA troops approached and captured Lewis alive, taking him from the 
custody of the peasant. 

Meanwhile, the other crew members had also landed and were being captured by NVN 
troops. All had ejected except for the navigator, 1Lt. Ben L. Fryer, who was 
apparently killed by the SAM explosion. Lewis and Condon were reunited soon 
after they were captured. After having been taken to Hanoi, Lewis believes he 
heard his EWO, Major Johnson scream not too far away. The thought that Johnson 
was also encouraged him -- he worried about his crew. 

Lewis was subjected to the same harassment and torture by his captors that many 
returned POWs have described. After a month in solitary, he was moved to the 
"Zoo" where he was reunited with Gough, Condon, and Cusimano. Together, 
they reconstructed the shootdown. Notably, LtCol. Condon, the radar navigator, 
remembers hearing three ejection seats going above him before he ejected. These 
three would have been the EWO (Johnson), pilot (Lewis) and co-pilot (Cusimano). 

Lt.Col. Condon said that Lt. Bennie Fryer was apparently killed in the SAM 
explosion, as he collapsed forward on the nav table and was bleeding profusely. 
His seat was the closest of any crew member to the point of impact of the SAM. 
Condon himself was wounded in the leg by shrapnel, and tried shaking Fryer and 
yelling at him to arouse him, but got no response. 

The fate of Maj. Allen Johnson is still a mystery. The surviving crew members 
believe that he ejected from the aircraft, and Lewis believes he was alive and 
in the hands of the North Vietnamese, because he heard what he believed to be 
Johnson screaming. Further, Lewis' interrogator told him that Johnson was a 
black man, a fact not revealed by any of the crew in interrogation. 

Then on September 30, 1977, the Vietnamese "discovered" and returned the remains 
of Bennie L. Fryer. It was not until December 4, 1985 that the Vietnamese 
returned the remains of Allen L. Johnson. The positive identification of these 
remains was announced publicly in June 1986. The Vietnamese denied knowledge of 
either man until their remains were returned. 

Reports mount that have convinced many authorities that Americans are still held 
captive in Southeast Asia. Were Johnson and Fryer among them? Did they survive 
to know the country they love has abandoned them? Isn't it time we brought our 
men home? 

Hero Home graphic at top of page is used with expressed permission of Rick. Thanks, Rick!

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