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Michael Scott Speicher (July 12, 1957– January 17, 1991) was a United States Navy pilot who was shot down over Iraq during the Gulf War. He was the first American combat casualty of the conflict. His remains were not recovered until August 2, 2009. His fate had not been known until then.
[edit] Early life, education and familyMichael Scott Speicher was born in Kansas City, Missouri on July 12, 1957.[1][2] Scott and his sister went to Lakewood Elementary School and Eastgate Middle School[3] before attending Winnetonka High School.[4] At the age of 15, Scott's family moved to Jacksonville, Florida where he attended Nathan Bedford Forrest High School. [4][1] After graduating from high school, he then attended Florida State University. Scott graduated from FSU in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in accounting and business management.[1][3] While at Florida State University Scott met his wife Joanne and they eventually married. Scott's father had been a fighter pilot in World War II and as a youth, he went on his first airplane flight when he was five years old.[3] When he was a teenager Scott also served in the Civil Air Patrol.[5] Scott joined the United States Navy and spent several years as a flight instructor on F/A-18 Hornet aircraft.[3] By the early 1990s, Scott had attained the rank of lieutenant commander and was stationed at Naval Air Station Cecil Field near Jacksonville, Florida.[2] He was assigned to unit VFA-81, nicknamed the Sunliners, and embarked onboard the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga.[2] At the time of his deployment to the Iraq theater, Scott and Joanne had a 3-year-old daughter and 1-year-old son.[1][2][3] [edit] Loss incidentLCDR Scott Speicher was flying an F/A-18 Hornet fighter when he was shot down 100 miles west of Baghdad, on the night of January 16, 1991, the first night of Operation Desert Storm.[1][2] His plane crashed in a remote, uninhabited wasteland[2] known as Tulul ad Dulaym 33°14′35.81″N 42°21′18.14″E / 33.2432806°N 42.3550389°E.[6] He was the first combat casualty for American forces in the war.[2] The U.S. Navy maintained in a 1997 document that Speicher was downed by a surface-to-air missile.[7] However, an unclassified summary of a 2001 CIA report suggests that Speicher's aircraft was shot down by a missile fired from an Iraqi aircraft,[6] most likely a MiG-25;[2] flown by Lt. Zuhair Dawood, 84th squadron of the IQAF[8]. Speicher was at 28,000 feet and travelling at 0.92 Mach (540 Knots) when the front of the aircraft suffered a catastrophic event. The impact from the R-40 missile threw the aircraft laterally off its flight path between fifty and sixty degrees with a resulting 6 g minimum load.[6] A pilot on the same mission stated: "I'm telling you right now, don't believe what you're being told. It was that MiG that shot Spike down."[9] [edit] Status and investigations[edit] 1990sThe day after the shoot-down, Speicher was placed on MIA status.[10] On May 22, 1991, after the end of the Gulf War, Speicher's status was changed to Killed in Action/Body Not Recovered (KIA/BNR).[10] In July 1992, Speicher's widow Joanne married Navy Commander Buddy Harris,[11] who was a friend and fellow naval aviator of Speicher's.[1] Harris later became a strong advocate for searching for Speicher, often meeting with U.S. officials.[11] In December 1993, a military official from Qatar discovered the wreckage of a plane in the desert, which was subsequently identified as Speicher's aircraft.[11] The canopy was a good distance from the rest of the aircraft, suggesting Speicher had tried to eject.[3] In April 1994, a U.S. satellite photographed apparent human-made symbols on the desert floor near the wreck's location, which might possibly be Speicher's E & E (Escape and Evade) sign, suggesting that Speicher might have survived the crash.[11] A covert American operation to inspect the site was considered, but rejected by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff John Shalikashvili as too risky.[11] In December 1995, working through the International Committee of the Red Cross, investigators from the Navy and Army's Central Identification Laboratory went to Iraq and conducted an excavation of the crash site.[10] Bedouin nomads gave investigators a flight uniform that was likely Speicher's, with his name supposedly cut out of it, but the investigators concluded it had been planted there.[11] Other evidence led investigators to further conclude Speicher had likely ejected, and was not in the plane at the time it crashed.[11] In September 1996, the Secretary of the Navy in a new review reaffirmed the presumptive finding of death.[10] Speicher was given a tomb at Arlington National Cemetery.[12] In 1997, a Defense Department document leaked to The New York Times showed that the Pentagon had not been forthcoming with information previously requested by U.S. Senator Rod Grams. Senator Grams publicly accused the Pentagon of misleading him, and joined with Senator Robert C. Smith in calling for an investigation by the Senate Intelligence Committee.[13] The Speicher case was taken up by the National Alliance of Families, which had been quite active in the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue.[14] Speculative theories were developed as to the circumstances of Speicher's shoot-down, and assuming he was still alive, why the U.S. military might not want to find him and why Iraq might not want to return him.[15] [edit] 2000sIn January 2001, the Secretary of the Navy changed Speicher's status to "missing in action."[10] This was the first time the Defense Department had ever made such a change.[12][16] In conjunction with the change in classification, Speicher was promoted to commander,[17] in accordance with Navy practice for POWs held a long time. The 2001 CIA report stated that he may have survived by ejecting.[6] Rumors from Iraq said that Speicher was captive, walked with a limp, and had facial scars.[11] In July 2002, Speicher was further promoted to captain.[18] Speicher's possible situation became a more high-profile issue in the build-up to war. In March 2002, the Washington Times ran five successive front-page articles about it, National Review Online ran a long piece on it,[15] and on September 12, 2002, President George W. Bush mentioned Speicher in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly as part of his case for war against Iraq. Senator Bill Nelson of Florida also took a strong interest in the case.[19] Speicher's status was changed again to "missing/captured" on October 11, 2002, one day after the United States Congress authorized the use of military force in Iraq. U.S. Secretary of the Navy Gordon England said, "While the information available to me now does not prove definitively that Capt. Speicher is alive and in Iraqi custody, I am personally convinced the Iraqis seized him sometime after his plane went down. Further, it is my firm belief that the government of Iraq knows what happened to Capt. Speicher."[11] Upon the 2003 invasion of Iraq in March 2003, a major investigation on the ground began, that also further increased public attention to the matter.[12] In April 2003, Speicher's possible initials were discovered in a cell at Hakmiyah prison in Baghdad.[19] Investigators did not think it was significant because a similar carving of "MJN" was found directly above the "MSS" scrawl. Subsequent tests on hair found in the cell's drain did not match Speicher's DNA. Senator Nelson went to Iraq to visit the prison personally.[20] Speicher's name was also found on a document in Iraq, dated January 2003, that had the names of prisoners being held in the country. Officials stated that the 90-page document offered no evidence of whether Speicher was alive and might have been written either to provide an accounting of former Iraqi POWs or to confuse the U.S. military. In any case, Speicher's whereabouts were yet to be discovered. Over time, as the U.S. occupation increasingly gained control over Anbar Province, it became apparent that Speicher was not a captive.[12] On January 5, 2009, the U.S. Navy held a review board to consider officially closing the case. The review board recommended that the Pentagon continue investigating what happened to Speicher. The recommendation went to Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter who had the final decision. Speicher's family believed and was worried that would change the status of Captain Speicher to KIA and declared they would oppose such action.[21] On March 10, 2009, the Secretary of the Navy declared that Captain Speicher's status was changed from "Missing/Captured" back to "Missing-in-Action."[22] [edit] Discovery and positive identificationOn August 2, 2009, the Navy reported that Speicher's remains were found in Iraq by United States Marines belonging to MNF-W's Task Force Military Police.[23] His jawbone (which was used to identify him after study at the Charles C. Carson Center for Mortuary Affairs at Dover Air Force Base[24]) was found in the desert, where according to local civilians, he was buried by Bedouins after his plane was shot down.[25] This confirmed that Speicher was never captured and that he died during the crash.[24] Senator Nelson attributed the delayed finding to the culture of the locality: "These Bedouins roam around in the desert, they don't stay in one place, and it just took this time to find the specific site."[12] Speicher's family expressed gratitude that the Defense Department had stayed with the case and that closure was now available.[12][24] The Christian Science Monitor termed the case "a veritable saga punctuated with hope, uncertainty, and despair for the past 18 years."[12] [edit] Memorials and dedicationsThe Florida State University named its tennis center after Speicher, an avid player. The $1.2 million Scott Speicher Tennis Complex was completed in 2003.[20] A memorial statue and plaque was erected on Naval Air Station Cecil Field dedicated to him. The Naval Air Station has since been deactivated. A memorial head marker dedicated to Speicher stands in Section H of Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. The memorial markers are erected when there are no identifiable remains for an individual whose death has been substantiated. Cemetery policy states that if remains are later recovered, the head marker will be interred with the coffin.[26] In effort to honor Speicher, a former Iraqi air base in the northern Iraqi city of Tikrit was renamed COB Speicher. A US Navy F/A-18 "Hornet" on display outside the Naval Aviation Schools Command at NAS Pensacola, Florida, was dedicated to the Speicher family in May 2009. The aircraft was painted in the markings of United States Navy squadron VFA-81 "Sunliners" and USS Saratoga, which was Speicher's squadron and ship when he was shot down. A front-page story in the August 7th 2009 issue of the Naval Air Station Pensacola newspaper Gosport describes how Speicher's remains were discovered and identified after 18 years. The story has a photo of Speicher's children talking with a member of VFA-81 next to the plane.[27] and [28] On August 13, 2009 the remains of Captain Michael Scott Speicher arrived in Florida 18 years after having been shot down in the Persian Gulf War. The plane containing his remains touched down at Jacksonville Naval Air Station at 3 p.m. Captain Speicher's final resting place is at the Jacksonville Memory Garden.[29] On September 7, 2009 Captain Michael Scott Speicher was honored at the start of the Florida State University football game against the University of Miami at Bobby Bowden Field at Doak Campbell Stadium when his squad of F/A-18's performed the "missing man formation." [edit] See also
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Categories: American military personnel of the Gulf War | American military personnel killed in the Gulf War | People from the Kansas City metropolitan area | People from Jacksonville, Florida | Florida State University alumni | Recipients of the Purple Heart medal | United States Navy officers | Recipients of a posthumous promotion | 1957 births | 1991 deaths | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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