Name: Howard
Burdette Lull, Jr.
Rank/Branch: E7/US Army
Unit: Advisor, Advisory Team 70, MACV
Date of Birth: 16 May 1930 (Dallas TX)
Home City of Record: (in 1989) Kansas City MO
Date of Loss: 07 April 1972
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 114338N 1063502E (XU731081)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Refno: 1819
Other Personnel In Incident: Richard S. Schott (missing); Mark A. Smith;
Kenneth Wallingford; Albert E. Carlson (all POWs held in Cambodia and
released in 1973)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 June 1990 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 1998.
REMARKS: EVADED TO XT7297 WHERE KILLED
SYNOPSIS: On April 5, 1972, the 5th North Vietnamese Division suddenly
smashed against the Loc Ninh district capitol before dawn, attacking as
no
enemy had yet attacked in that war. The Communist troops had Russian
T-54
and PT-76 tanks, artillery and a conventional battle plan.
American forces in the area battled for two days before being overrun.
On
April 7, 1972, Maj. Albert E. Carlson; MSgt. Howard B. Lull; LtCol.
Richard
Schott; Capt. Mark A. Smith; and SFC Kenneth Wallingford were five
advisors
on Advisory Team 70, MACV, at Loc Ninh when the city was completely
overrun.
Radio contact was maintained until approximately 0800 hours, when the
tactical operations center began burning. Later in the day, one of the
advisors radioed that they were going into hiding, taking their radios
with
them.
After the incident, South Vietnamese Army personnel reported
intercepting an
enemy radio broadcast which stated that three United States advisors had
been captured. Subsequent information received through intelligence
sources
reported that five Americans were taken prisoner. This report indicated
that
four of the prisoners had been taken to a temporary PW camp and one to
an
enemy hospital.
The Vietnamese captured Smith, Wallingford and Carlson whom they held in
Cambodia for the remaining 10 months. On June 28, 1972, the U.S.
Casualty
division changed their status from missing to captured. The three were
released at Loc Ninh in the general POW release in 1973.
Although most details of this incident are still classified, Capt. Smith
indicated in his debriefing that he, Lull and Schott had been together
in a
bunker shortly before he was captured. Lull left the bunker to evade
capture, while the severely wounded Schott knew he would not survive,
and
lifted his own weapon to his head and shot himself to give the others a
chance to escape.
Lull's family has been given a number of reports that possibly relate to
Howard B. Lull. The one they find most credible was told them from a
military official. This scenario has Lull leaving the bunker, and
evading
capture for about three days, while other soldiers reportedly kept radio
contact with him. The last word from Lull was that he was heading for An
Loc, the provencial capital to the south.
Two other tales are not as credible, Lull's family feels: One came from
a
South Vietnamese doctor who was captured by the communists after
escaping
with Lull. The doctor later told U.S. authorities that shortly after
leaving
the compound, Lull went into a rubber plantation that was hit by U.S.
napalm.
The other account, from a South Vietnamese POW, had Lull buried in a
shallow
grave after being shot to death while crossing a stream with South
Vietnamese soldiers.
One of the Americans who was captured at Loc Ninh reported asking his
captors about Lull. The North Vietnamese officer replied that Lull was
not
cooperating and thus would not be going to prison with them.
No one really knows what happened to Howard Lull. Lull, if captured,
was not
taken to the same prison camps as were Smith, Carlson and Wallingford.
Some
reports say that he was killed by the North Vietnamese, but the U.S.
continued his status as Missing In Action pending verification of death.
Schott was carried as Missing until Capt. Smith's debrief, at which
time his
status was changed to Killed in Action.